Saudi-led coalition launches air strike at Yemen port

Yemen national flag
An attack on Yemen's port city of Mukalla signals a new escalation in tensions with Saudi Arabia. -AP

The Saudi-led coalition in Yemen has launched a limited air strike targeting "foreign military support" at Mukalla ‍port, days after it warned the main southern separatist group against making military moves in ​the eastern province of Hadramout.

An offensive by Yemen's southern separatists earlier this month pitted the United Arab ⁠Emirates-backed Southern Transitional Council (STC) against Saudi-supported Yemeni government troops, bringing the two nations closer than they have ever been to an all-out conflict. Yemen has been mired in a civil war since 2014.

A coalition spokesperson said two ships arriving from Fujairah entered Mukalla port ‌on Saturday and ​Sunday without authorisation from the coalition, disabled their tracking systems and unloaded large ‍quantities of weapons and combat vehicles "to support the (STC)."

The coalition also said there were no casualties or collateral damage from the strike at Mukalla port, Saudi state media reported.

Acting on a request from the head of Yemen's Presidential Leadership Council, Rashad al-Alimi, to protect civilians in Hadramout ​and al-Mahra, coalition air forces carried out a ‌limited military operation early on Tuesday targeting the unloaded weapons and vehicles, Saudi state media said citing Turki ​al-Malki, the coalition spokesperson.

Two sources told Reuters the strike targeted the dock ‍where the cargo of the two ships was unloaded.

The STC separatists were initially part of the Saudi-led alliance that intervened in Yemen in 2015 against ​the Houthis. ​But they subsequently decided to ​seek self-rule in the south.

Since 2022, they have ​been part of an alliance that controls southern areas outside Houthi control under a Saudi-backed power-sharing initiative.

The Houthis control the northern part of the country, including the capital Sanaa, after forcing the Saudi-backed government to flee south.

"We will continue to prevent any military support from any country to any Yemeni faction without co-ordination with the legitimate government," the coalition added.