Breadcrumb
Yemen: US strikes kill 74 in fuel port attack, injure over 170
US strikes on a Yemeni fuel port killed at least 74 people, Houthi rebels said on Friday, in the deadliest attack of Washington's renewed campaign against the Iran-backed group.
The strikes also injured more than 170 people, according to a Houthi-run television station that broadcast footage of large blazes lighting up the night sky.
The US military said its overnight attack on the Ras Issa fuel port aimed to cut off a source of supplies and funds for the Houthis, who control large swathes of the Arabian Peninsula's poorest country.
"Thirty-eight workers and employees killed and 102 others injured in a preliminary toll of the US aggression on the Ras Issa oil facility," Al-Masirah TV said, quoting health authorities in rebel-held Hodeida.
AFP could not independently verify the casualty toll.
The US military has hammered the Houthis with near-daily air strikes since 15 March in a bid to end their attacks on Israel and US-linked shipping in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden.
The rebels began their attacks in response to Israel's military onslaught in the Gaza Strip in solidarity with Palestinians, later pausing their attacks during a recent two-month ceasefire.
Protests against the deadly war have also been been held in the country.
In a statement, the US Central Command (CENTCOM) said: "US forces took action to eliminate this source of fuel for the Iran-backed Houthi terrorists and deprive them of illegal revenue that has funded Houthi efforts to terrorise the entire region for over 10 years.
"The objective of these strikes was to degrade the economic source of power of the Houthis, who continue to exploit and bring great pain upon their fellow countrymen."
Ships "have continued to supply fuel via the port of Ras Issa" despite Washington this year designating the rebels a foreign terrorist organisation, CENTCOM added, without specifying the source of the fuel.
In images broadcast early Friday by Al-Masirah, a fireball was seen igniting off the coast as thick columns of smoke rose above what appeared to be an ongoing blaze.
The Houthi TV station later broadcast interviews with survivors of the attack lying on stretchers, including one man with burns on his arms.
"We ran away. The strikes came one after the other, then everything was on fire," one man who said he worked at the port told Al-Masirah.
US strikes on the Houthis began under former president Joe Biden but have resumed and intensified under President Donald Trump.
The new wave of attacks follows Houthi threats to resume drone and missile launches against international shipping in protest at Israel's renewed attacks and siege on the Gaza Strip.
Israel cut off all supplies to Gaza at the beginning of March and resumed its offensive in the Palestinian territory on 18 March, killing more than 1,500 Palestinians and leaving a ceasefire in tatters.
Also on Friday, Israel's military said it intercepted an incoming missile from Yemen that set off sirens in "several areas".
Houthi attacks have hampered shipping through the Suez Canal - a vital route that normally carries about 12 percent of world shipping traffic - forcing many companies into detours around the tip of southern Africa.
Trump has vowed that military action against the rebels will continue "until they are no longer a threat to shipping".
US State Department spokeswoman Tammy Bruce claimed that the Chinese satellite firm Chang Guang Satellite Technology Company was "directly supporting Iran-backed Houthi terrorist attacks on US interests".
"Their actions - and Beijing's support of the company, even after our private engagements with them - is yet another example of China's empty claims to support peace," she told journalists.
Bruce did not initially provide details on the nature of the company's support for the rebels, but later referred to "a Chinese company providing satellite imagery to the Houthis".