The Yemeni air force bombed Shia Muslim fighters north of Sanaa on Saturday in fighting that caused "a large number of casualties", local officials said, after a truce reached last month between the insurgents and government forces collapsed. The fighting in northern Yemen, which has taken on a sectarian tone, is further destabilising a country struggling to overcome many problems, including a secessionist movement in its restive south and the nation-wide spread of al Qaeda insurgency.
Shia Houthi fighters, officially known as Ansarullah, blamed army units linked to the rival Sunni Muslim Islah party for breaking the June 23 ceasefire on Friday when government troops advanced on an area in al-Jouf province. A Yemeni government official said the army's advance on the town of al-Safra in the province north-east of Sanaa had been prompted by the failure of Houthi fighters to vacate positions in compliance with the ceasefire.
Tribal sources in al-Jouf province, which is partly controlled by the Houthi rebels, said at least 18 people - 10 Houthis, five tribesmen and three soldiers - had been killed in clashes on Friday. The fighting later expanded to the adjacent Omran province, where the Yemeni air force flew sorties and bombed Houthi positions around the provincial capital early on Saturday. Local officials said "a large number of casualties" had been killed in Saturday's violence, including at least eight tribal fighters and four soldiers. The Houthis gave no figures for casualties on their side.
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