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Arabia
Saudi and Yemen battle Zaidi rebels
2009-11-08
AL-KHUBAH, Saudi-controlled Arabia — Saudi forces pounded Yemeni rebels on Saturday for a fifth straight day as Yemeni President Ali Abdallah Saleh ruled out a truce in his war on the Shiite insurgents.

Huge smoke plumes could be seen rising above Jebel al-Dukhan, a 2,000-metre (6,600-foot) peak on the border near the town of Al-Khubah, a sign of continued bombing by Saudi fighter jets, residents said. Saudi artillery shelled apparent rebel positions to the south, the residents said as medics reported seven Saudis and an unknown number of rebels had been killed since Tuesday.

"We're coming to grips with these traitors, these renegades, and daily we are losing scores of martyrs from our best officers and soldiers and citizens," Saleh said during a speech at Balhaf in the Gulf of Aden.

"But their blood is not being shed in vain and there will be no reconciliation, no truce nor stoppage to the war until we see the end of this small group of deviants," he said without mentioning a Saudi incursion into Yemen on Wednesday.

Meanwhile there was no confirmation of rebel claims they had seized a number of Saudi soldiers.

"With Allah's help, the Saudi tyrannical advance into Yemen's territory has been defeated," said a statement on the rebels' website. "A number of its troops have been captured and several military vehicles and supplies been seized."

Signs of the continuing fight were present along the highway to Khuba, about 60 kilometres (35 miles) inland from the Red Sea coast. Saudi medium- and long-range artillery pieces were in position, and soldiers patrolled the road and fields amid makeshift army camps.

Trucks laden with mattresses, chairs and other household goods plodded down the road away from the border, from where most of the population had been evacuated to tent camps earlier in the week.

But hospital staff in the nearby town of Samtah said they had not received any new casualties, after several dozen wounded soldiers were brought in the day before, most with gunshot or shrapnel wounds. Altogether 126 wounded had been delivered to the hospital since Tuesday, when a band of Shiite Zaidi rebels, under siege from the government since August, crossed into Saudi Arabia and shot up a border post, killing one border guard and injuring 11 others.
Posted by:Steve White

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