A military operation towards "building blocks" in Al-Jawf

Intense raids by the "coalition" on Houthi sites in Sanaa

The fighters of the Arab Coalition to Support Legitimacy in Yemen launched intense raids on Houthi militia sites in the capital, Sanaa, for the third day in a row, while the army and tribes began a military operation towards the Al-Labanat camp in Al-Jawf from three axes.

In the details, violent explosions reverberated across the Yemeni capital, Sanaa, yesterday dawn, for the third day in a row, as a result of the coalition fighters targeting the assembly workshops and stores of the drones and ballistic missiles of the Houthi militia in the Atan camps, south of the city, and the Al-Dailami base near Sanaa airport, and Qaid Al-Sama in the district I welcome north of Sanaa, and Rayma Hamid in Sanhan District, south of the capital.

It also targeted the maintenance camp in the Al-Nahda neighborhood of the Al-Thawra District, the Engineering Department in Sawan, the camps of Al-Jumaymah, Mount Naqum, Al-Sawad, and Hazeez, all of which were areas that included camps belonging to the former Republican Guard, which are currently under the control of militias.

Informed sources in Sanaa stated that the raids led to the death of 12 leaders, including foreign experts in installing drones and ballistic missiles, in addition to the death of many Houthi elements who were at the targeted sites, noting that the militias, the day before yesterday, had gathered two of its senior leaders With the rank of brigadier general, they are Brigadier General Ali Saleh Nasser Al-Fayzi and Brigadier General Ibrahim Ali Saleh Ali Jarallah, along with Colonel Ahmed Ibrahim Qassem Al-Qadimi, Lieutenant Colonel Muhammad Ali Al-Qasimi, Lieutenant Colonel Badi Yahya Muhammad Tami, along with six secondary leaders.

On the other hand, the militias kidnapped a number of Political Security officers and employees of the security services in the capital, Sanaa, after a raid campaign carried out during the past two days, in addition to the kidnapping of 30 activists participating in the calls to demonstrate against the militias against the background of the case of the murdered Abdullah Al-Aghbry.

In Al-Jawf, the army and tribes, backed by the Arab coalition, began a three-pronged military operation towards the Al-Labanat camp east of the city of Al-Hazm, the capital of the governorate, according to field sources, indicating that the attack was from the side of the Khilafah and Khosf area, and from the Al-Sail side south of the camp, and from the Nader Mountains side North camp.

The army forces and the tribes destroyed Houthi fighting vehicles, including the Sheol used to pave roads at the Bir Al-Marazeeq front, which led to the death of 12 Houthis, including the prominent Houthi leader Brigadier General Qaid Ali Al-Arrat, and the injury of others, while the Dahaydah area in the vicinity of Al-Marazeeq was restored and secured. In full.

On the Flag Front, nine Houthis were captured after they were ambushed while fleeing the battles in eastern Al-Jawf, while battles and operations continued to secure the liberated areas in Al-Nudud, Al-Shahala and Al-Habeel.

In Ma'rib, battles continued on the southern and western fronts of the governorate, most notably on the Mahli, Rahba and al-Mukhdarah fronts, during which the army and tribes entered the Mahli and Rahba fronts, amid the retreat and flight of the Houthi elements, which led to the restoration of Wadi al-Labb and the area of ​​Kharaba.

In Al-Abdiyyah, the army and the tribes managed to thwart the Houthi attack, which led to the death of 17 Houthis, including the Houthi leader Abdul-Malik Al-Gharabani, and the families of seven others, while 11 others were wounded, while nine members of the army and tribes were killed and wounded.

In Al-Mukhdara, the army forces were able to regain the Al-Qada area, and the militias inflicted 13 dead, and captured five others, and seized a large quantity of weapons and ammunition during the confrontations that the front witnessed at dawn yesterday.

• The strikes killed 12 leaders, including foreign experts in installing drones and missiles.

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