Coalition fighter jets launched a series of qualitative raids on Iranian-backed Houthi militia positions in the south and west of the Yemeni capital Sanaa, while militias continued their military escalation and abuses on the West Coast fronts, while tribal mediation failed to defuse the fighting on Shabwa fronts.

In detail, the Arab coalition fighter jets launched a series of air strikes yesterday on military positions belonging to the Iranian-backed Houthi coup militia in Sanaa, according to local sources in the capital, pointing out that the raids targeted military positions belonging to militias in Sanhan district south of the capital, which included weapons stores Rocket launchers.

The sources pointed out that violent explosions rocked the area, due to raids that were concentrated and intensified followed by violent explosions in the weapons stores belonging to militias in the camp of al-Jarba and Rima Hamid and Qaa al-Faidi, as the raids targeted the area of ​​Asr amid the overflights of coalition aircraft in the sky of Sanaa.

In Hodeidah, on the west coast of Yemen, Iranian Houthi militias continued their military escalation against joint forces positions and continued to target civilians, where hardly a day goes by without them committing a humanitarian offense targeting the lives of innocent civilians. The city of Hodeidah has a large share of bombing and targeting during the past few days.

The militias also targeted dozens of artillery shells in the Duraimi district south of Hodeidah, which fell on different areas of the Directorate, according to military field sources, noting that the militias shelled a number of 120-caliber mortar sites belonging to the joint forces east of the Directorate, as well as scattered areas south of the Directorate for indiscriminate shelling Heavy artillery shells, while militias targeted residential areas with heavy weapons intensively and continuously.

The militias continued their daily breaches of the UN truce, targeting joint forces positions east of the western city of Hodeidah. A military source said that the militia elements stationed in the city launched the heaviest shelling on the positions of the joint forces with tanks and heavy artillery, in a new escalation of operations carried out by the militias in the province of Hodeidah.

According to field sources, the shelling coincided with intensive firing of various types of medium weapons of type 12.7, 14.5 weapons and 50 caliber weapons, again targeting the Red Sea mills, which led to the burning of large fires.

According to field sources, artillery shelling hit a building in the Red Sea mills, causing considerable damage.

The militias have already targeted the Red Sea mills several times with artillery shells and heavy weapons and have been heavily damaged.The UN teams have worked to repair them as they seek to return to work again.The mills contain large quantities of wheat that the militias have refused to let out from within.

On the other hand, the Houthi militias continued to push new reinforcements towards the district of Hays, south of Hodeidah governorate, one of the most volatile fronts of intense shelling and near-daily attacks.

According to the joint forces, reinforcements from the militias came from the al-Jarrahi and al-Udayn districts of Ibb governorate, and headed towards al-Udain junction and areas adjacent to the Hays district, indicating that the militias are re-launching an attack on the joint forces' positions and recovering the areas they lost earlier.

In al-Dhali, Houthi militias renewed rocket shelling on populated villages and civilian communities in al-Dhali 'governorate, and fired an earthquake-type rocket at one of the villages in Maris, according to field sources. North of Dali, after a campaign of kidnappings of merchants and shop owners in the main market in the city.

For the second day in a row, raids and abductions from houses and tampering with private property continued, after it abducted at least 20 civilians from their homes, launched an armed campaign in Al-Fakhir, consisting of 30 crews and dozens of gunmen.

The militias carried out indiscriminate raids on houses, arrested civilians, tampered with property, and practiced intimidation and abuse of civilians.

In Shabwa, members of the Muslim Brotherhood blew up the military situation in the city of Ataq, and turned on a truce agreement brokered by the elders and notables of the province to avoid any possible confrontations.

Local sources said that the truce agreement stipulated that the military forces should leave the capital and hand over their security to the security authorities and elite forces, pointing out that the Muslim Brotherhood elements in those forces turned against the agreement and created military positions and attacked security forces and elite forces.

According to the sources, the clashes resulted in deaths and injuries, including civilians, after those elements targeted residential neighborhoods from positions stationed near the airport Ataq.

In Taiz, the joint forces managed to end the sedition that the Brotherhood's Popular Mobilization militias tried to ignite in the Hajriya districts south of Taiz.

Tribal sources said that the joint forces, led by Hamdi Shukri, secured the city of soil and surrounding areas, which were besieged by the Popular Mobilization militias, and supported the 35 armored brigade to end attempts by militias aimed at controlling the city linking Taiz city to the Yemeni interim capital Aden.