
Investigation debunks claims about coalition strikes in Yemen
The coalition's Joint Incidents Assessment Team held a meeting on Wednesday to address allegations regarding airstrikes in various regions of Yemen in recent years.
On Jan. 13, 2022, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights reported that an airstrike partially damaged the emergency department and inpatient clinics of a hospital in the Al-Sawad area.
It was claimed that coalition forces targeted a military camp near the hospital.
The JIAT reviewed relevant documentation and found that a military camp, known as Al-Sawad camp, was located near the 48 Model Hospital, which is on the coalition forces' no strike list.
On the day of the alleged strike, coalition forces conducted a targeted airstrike on military targets within the camp, based on intelligence regarding Houthi militia activities.
The bombs were guided and aimed to minimize civilian impact, hitting their intended targets accurately and remaining a safe distance from the hospital.
Therefore, the JIAT concluded that coalition forces did not target the hospital on Jan. 13, 2022.
On March 3, 2021, reports emerged alleging that coalition forces conducted an airstrike targeting a farm in the Al-Watadah area of the Khawlan Directorate in Sanaa Governorate.
The JIAT said it reviewed documents, including air tasking orders, daily mission schedules and satellite imagery.
The investigation revealed that no specific coordinates for the alleged farm were provided.
The JIAT found no record of airstrikes in Al-Watadah on the date in question, nor in the days surrounding it. Open-source searches yielded no corroborating information.
In conclusion, the JIAT determined that coalition forces did not target a farm in Al-Watadah on March 3, 2021, as alleged.
Other reports indicated that a missile fell near a house in Al-Malaheet village on Feb. 23, 2020. The JIAT investigated and found no evidence that coalition forces had conducted missile strikes in the area on that date.
On June 4, 2015, allegations surfaced regarding an airstrike on the governorate building in Zinjibar. The JIAT confirmed that no air missions were conducted in Abyan on that date.
Through these investigations, the JIAT aims to clarify allegations and uphold accountability and transparency.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Asharq Al-Awsat
6 days ago
- Asharq Al-Awsat
Detained Sailors Reveal Houthi Smuggling Routes from Iran to Yemen
Confessions by detained sailors have revealed the smuggling routes used by the Houthi militants in Yemen to smuggle weapons from Iran. Yemeni forces arrested in July seven people on board a ship they intercepted in the Red Sea. The sailors revealed the details of a significant smuggling network run by Iran's Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) that ran routes through Beirut, Damascus, Somalia and Djibouti to reach the Houthi-held ports of Hodeidah. The confessions were aired by al-Joumhouriya television that is run by the Yemeni national resistance that is based on the western Yemeni coast. Four sailors confessed to smuggling arms shipments from Iran's Bandar Abbas port to Hodeidah. They have been identified as Amer Masawa, Ali Qassir, Issa Qassir and Abdullah Afifi. Masawa revealed that a Houthi official in Hodeidah had tasked him back in 2023 to return a ship from Iran to Yemen. Masawa headed to Houthi-held Sanaa with others where they were granted passports. From there, they boarded a Yemenia Airways flight to the Jordanian capital Amman. From there, they continued on to the Lebanese capital Beirut where a man in his 60s escorted them to an apartment that was ready to receive them. They remained there for three days before being transported by car to the Syrian capital Damascus and from there they flew to Tehran, Iran. In Tehran, a man escorted the travelers to a Houthi camp run by leading Houthi member Mohammed al-Talebi. Yemeni authorities identify him as a Houthi representative of the smuggling network from Iran. After ten days in Tehran, they were flown to Bandar Abbas city where they stayed in a villa owned by Talebi who explained to them their mission. Soon after, they were joined by ten Somali sailors. Oman route The second sailor, Ali Qassir, recalled how he was recruited by people affiliated with a Houthi official at Hodeidah's al-Salif port, Hussein al-Attas, to bring a ship from Iran to Yemen. Ali Qassir and others were taken to the Jowf province east of Sanaa where they met with another smuggler who escorted them along a desert route through Jawf, Marib and Hadramawt to the al-Mahra province bordering Oman. At the Sarfait border crossing, a smuggler escorted them to Oman where another person took them to Salalah city. Three days later, they were transported to Muscat where they were flown to Bandar Abbas. They were taken to a camp run by the Houthis and where they joined their fellow sailors, as well as the ten Somalis. Talebi then set about explaining their missions. Issa Qassir, Ali's brother, said they were divided into two groups to sail with the illegal cargo back to Yemen. They were informed that they were transporting children's toys, power generators and boxes of cancer treatment, which they were instructed must remain refrigerated. As they sailed off the Omani coast, their vessel broke down. They contacted Omani authorities that transported them to Muscat, where they stayed for ten days until the ship was repaired, after which they headed to Yemen. A third sailor said the people on the ship were unaware of the true nature of the cargo they were carrying, assuming it was battering and construction equipment. The coastguard eventually stopped their vessel and boarded it to discover the illegal shipment that included rockets and other weapons. Further confessions revealed that the IRGC used three smuggling routes from Iran. The first was a direct route from Bandar Abbas to al-Salif, the second ran through Somalia and the third through Djibouti to al-Salif. The sailors revealed that international patrols in the Gulf of Aden and Red Sea never intercepted their vessels. While sailing at night, they would cross the Bab al-Mandeb Strait and sail west of the international shipping route to avoid detection by Yemen's coastguard and national resistance.


Asharq Al-Awsat
06-08-2025
- Asharq Al-Awsat
Weapons Shipment Seized at Yemen's Aden Port
A joint task force of Yemeni security, judicial, and presidential officials on Tuesday began investigating a suspicious shipment seized at the port of Aden containing drone components and espionage equipment, as a UN report warned of an emerging arms trafficking network linking Yemen's Houthi militias with al-Qaeda and Somalia's al-Shabaab. Local sources in Aden reported that the Port Security Directorate in the free zone had recently alerted the public prosecution to a container shipment found to contain fully assembled drone storage systems and jet propulsion devices. Anti-terrorism units were immediately dispatched to the site alongside prosecutors to secure the cargo and begin legal procedures. According to the sources, the cache was discovered during routine inspection operations, with no accompanying documents identifying its origin or intended destination. Officials have so far declined to provide further details, but speculation is mounting that the shipment was destined for the Iran-aligned Houthi militias, which have long relied on smuggled weapons and military supplies from Tehran. Sources dismissed reports suggesting the shipment was intercepted at sea, saying it likely entered the port via official channels with forged paperwork in an apparent attempt to bypass inspections - an effort thwarted by port authorities and vigilant security forces. The latest seizure comes weeks after Yemen's National Resistance Forces intercepted a major Iranian weapons shipment near Hanish Island in the Red Sea. That cache reportedly weighed 750 tons and included various types of military equipment, all bound for the Houthis.

Al Arabiya
05-08-2025
- Al Arabiya
‘Projectile' fired at Israel from Yemen, intercepted by military
A projectile launched toward Israel from Yemen was intercepted on Tuesday, the Israeli military said, after air-raid sirens sounded across parts of the country. 'Following the sirens that sounded a short while ago in several areas in Israel, a missile that was launched from Yemen was intercepted by the IAF,' the military said in a post on social media platform X. The Houthi militia, which controls Yemen's capital Sanaa and large parts of the country, is part of a regional alliance against Israel backed by Iran. That alliance also includes groups such as Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza. Since the outbreak of the war in Gaza on October 7, 2023, the Houthis have repeatedly launched missiles at Israel — most of which have been intercepted — and targeted ships they claim are linked to Israel, saying they are acting in solidarity with Palestinians. In response, Israel has carried out multiple airstrikes on Houthi-controlled infrastructure, including ports in western Yemen and the airport in Sanaa.