Houthi officials have denied reports of a partial ceasefire by Saudi Arabia and stressed the need for a comprehensive cessation of "aggression", accusing Saudi Arabia of not being serious.

Mohammad Ali al-Houthi, a member of the Supreme Political Council of the Houthi group, said there was no truth to any leaks about a partial ceasefire by Saudi Arabia.

Mohammed Ali said that leaks in some American newspapers about an agreement with Saudi Arabia to stop the bombing of four areas, do not stand behind the official.

He pointed out that the initiative of Mahdi al-Mashat, head of the Supreme Political Council of the Houthis, provides for a complete cessation of what he described as aggression, while lifting the siege on Yemen.

For his part, member of the political bureau of the Houthi group Hizam al-Assad - in an interview with Al Jazeera - that Saudi Arabia is not taking any seriousness, especially during the current period.

The Wall Street Journal reported on Friday that Saudi Arabia had agreed to a ceasefire in four areas, including the capital Sanaa, in response to the Houthis' announcement a few days ago that they would halt attacks on the kingdom. From Yemen.

Although the Houthis fired two missiles into Saudi Arabia last week, the Saudis saw the attack as not dangerous to undermine the new ceasefire efforts, the newspaper said.

Bloomberg also quoted sources as saying that Saudi Arabia was moving towards a partial ceasefire in Yemen.

The Houthi group announced a unilateral ceasefire in Yemen last week, just days after it claimed responsibility for the September 4 attack on Saudi Aramco oil facilities.