News ID: 386167
Publish Date: 23 January 2022 - 14:16

Humanitarian Committees Hold a Protest Stand off Yemen’s Jail Struck by Saudi-led Aggression’s Warplanes

Humanitarian committees and organizations in Yemen held a protest stand off the jail in Saada province which was struck by the Saudi-led Aggression’s Warplanes to denounce massacre.

According to Navid Shahed website , Meanwhile, a Yemeni official at the ministry of telecommunication indicated that the technicians managed to enter telecommunication center in Hodeidah which was destroyed by the Saudi-led air raids.

A brutal massacre was committed as Saudi-led warplanes struck on Friday a prison in the northwestern province of Saada.

Saudi fighter jets targeted a temporary prison in Saada, killing or injuring more than hundred, Al-Massirah TV quoted the sources as saying.

Local sources reported that at least 150 people have arrived to hospitals in Saada including martyrs.

About 2,500 people have reportedly been in the prison as rescue operations are taking place, with dozens are still reportedly under the rubble.

Meanwhile, the Arab impoverished country has lost its connection to the internet nationwide after Saudi-led air strikes targeted a site in the contested city of Hodeida, plunging the war-torn nation offline.

The disruption began around 1:00 a.m. (local time) on Friday and affected TeleYemen, the state-owned monopoly that controls internet access in the country, advocacy group NetBlocks said.

Yemen was “in the midst of a nation-scale internet blackout following air strike on (a) telecom building,” NetBlocks said, without elaborating.

Yemen has been since March 2015 under a brutal aggression by Saudi-led coalition. Tens of thousands of Yemenis have been injured and martyred in Saudi-led strikes, with the vast majority of them are civilians.

The coalition has been also imposing a blockade on the impoverished country’s ports and airports as a part of his aggression which is aimed at restoring power to fugitive former president Abdrabbuh Mansour Hadi.

Meanwhile, Yemen is home to the world’s largest humanitarian crisis, with at least 7 million people on the brink of famine and hundreds of thousands suffering from cholera.

Source: Al-Manar

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