Houthi Missile Attack on Saudi Airport Wounds 26

DUBAI (Reuters) —
Tribesmen loyal to Houthi rebels hold up their weapons. (AP Photo/Hani Mohammed, File)

Yemeni Houthi forces launched a missile strike on an airport in southern Saudi Arabia early on Wednesday which wounded 26 people, the Saudi-led military coalition said.

The coalition, which has been fighting the Iran-aligned Houthis in Yemen, said it would make a “firm” response.

A coalition statement, carried on Saudi-owned Al Arabiya channel, said a projectile hit the arrivals hall at Abha Airport, causing material damage. Three women and two children were among the wounded, who were of Saudi, Yemeni and Indian nationalities, it said.

The Houthi-run Masirah channel earlier said the Houthi group had launched a cruise missile attack on Abha Airport, which is about 125 miles north of the border with Yemen and serves domestic and regional routes.

“Targeting Abha Airport proves that the Houthis have obtained advanced weapons from Iran,” the coalition statement said, saying the attack could amount to a war crime.

The attack follows an armed drone strike last month on two oil-pumping stations in the kingdom that were claimed by the Houthis. Saudi Arabia accused Iran of ordering the attack, a charge that Tehran denies.

A Houthi military spokesman on Tuesday threatened that the group, which has been battling the Saudi military alliance in Yemen for four years, would target every airport in Saudi Arabia and that the coming days would reveal “big surprises.”

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