REPORT: Yemeni leader Hadi leaves country as Saudi Arabia keeps up air strikes on Houthi rebels

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26-03-2015 | 14:16
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REPORT: Yemeni leader Hadi leaves country as Saudi Arabia keeps up air strikes on Houthi rebels
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3min
REPORT: Yemeni leader Hadi leaves country as Saudi Arabia keeps up air strikes on Houthi rebels
Yemen's President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi left his refuge in Aden under Saudi protection on Thursday and arrived in Saudi Arabia as Houthi rebels battled with forces still loyal to him on the outskirts of the southern port city.       
 
Throughout the day, warplanes from Saudi Arabia and Arab allies struck at Houthi forces, who have taken over much of the country in their campaign to oust Hadi.        
 
The Saudi-led military intervention marked a major escalation of the Yemen crisis, in which Iran supports the Shi'ite Muslim Houthis, and Sunni Muslim monarchies in the Gulf back Hadi and his fellow Sunni loyalists in Yemen's south.      
 
Iran denounced the surprise assault on the Houthis and demanded an immediate halt to Saudi-led military operations.           
 
Tehran also made clear Saudi Arabia's deployment of a Sunni coalition against its Shi'ite enemies would complicate efforts to end a conflict that will only inflame the sectarian hatreds already fueling wars around the Middle East.       
 
But Hadi's departure from Aden, where he had holed up since fleeing the Houthi-controled capital Sanaa in February, could also be a turning point.           
 
Saudi state television channel Al Ekhbariya said Hadi had arrived in the Saudi capital Riyadh on Thursday. Saudi-owned al Arabiya television said he would go onto the Eyptian Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh to attend an Arab summit on Saturday.            
 
Mohammed Marem, the director of Hadi's office, confirmed he  would attend the Sharm meeting in person, dropping his original plan to address other Arab leaders via a closed-circuit television link.       
 
"In light of the events and developments that have happened since dawn, he has decided to attend the summit and participate in person," Marem told Reuters.          
 
But it was not certain if Hadi would be able to return to Aden.           
 
On the city's northern outskirts, Houthis and allied troops fought gun battles with militiamen loyal to Hadi. Thirteen pro-Houthi fighters and three militiamen were killed.        
 
Pro-Hadi fighters retook Aden airport, a day after it was captured by Houthi forces advancing on the city. The facility remained closed.   
 
 
REUTERS
 
 
To watch Rita Khoury's report, please click on the VIDEO above
 

News Bulletin Reports

Yemeni

leader

leaves

country

Saudi

Arabia

keeps

strikes

Houthi

rebels

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