logo
Israel bombard Yemen's biggest airport and capital city in response to Tel Aviv attack

Israel bombard Yemen's biggest airport and capital city in response to Tel Aviv attack

Independent06-05-2025

Israel has launched attacks on Yemen's largest airport as well as key infrastructure in the capital of Sanaa in a second day of retaliatory action against the Houthi rebel group.
A senior member of the Israeli Defence Force said that the Air Force attacked and destroyed a Houthi base at Sanaa International Airport, completely shutting the facility down.
The Israeli military also struck other targets around the Yemeni capital, following an attack on the Hodeidah Port on Monday.
Posting images from a meeting at the Air Force Base in Kirya on Monday evening, Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu said: 'We will continue to act forcefully against any threat to the state of Israel.'
Israeli Defence Force Colonel Avichay Adraee said the strikes were in retaliation for a Houthi attack on Tel Aviv Airport on Sunday.
'The terrorist Houthi regime uses the airport, like the Hodeidah port that was attacked yesterday, to transport weapons and activists, and it is continuously operated for terrorist purposes,' he said on Tuesday afternoon.
'This is further evidence of how the terrorist Houthi organisation exploits civilian infrastructure for terrorist purposes.'
Several power stations in the Sana'a region were also attacked, Col Adraee said, as they were being exploited by the Houthi group.
'The Al-Omran Cement Factory, north of Sanaa, was also attacked. It is considered one of the Houthis' most important resources for building tunnels and military infrastructure. Targeting the factory constitutes a blow to the regime's economy and its military armament methods,' Col Adraee said.
Tuesday's attacks followed the Israeli strike on Hodeidah port, which killed at least one and left 35 others injured.
The Israeli military said its fighter jets struck Houthi targets in Hodeidah and its vicinity on Monday, disabling the area which 'serves as a hub for the transfer of Iranian weapons and equipment for military needs,' the military claimed in a statement.
It said the strikes were "carried out in response to repeated attacks carried out by the Houthi terrorist regime against the State of Israel in which surface-to-surface missiles and unmanned aircraft were launched".
In the aftermath of the attack, the Houthis, who largely control the Arab nation, shut down the area around the port and the factory.
Although Yemen said the extent of the damage was unknown, images showed a fire engulfing the container berth of the port.
Anonymous sources told Reuters that 70 per cent of the port's five docks, warehouses and customs area were damaged. The strikes occurred as two ships were unloading their cargo, a port worker said.
Hodeidah is the second-largest port in the Red Sea after Aden, and it is the entry point for about 80 per cent of Yemen's food imports.
Israel carried out more than 10 strikes targeting the port as well as Al Salakhanah and Al Hawak neighbourhoods in the city of Hodeidah, local residents said. Four missiles struck the cement factory.
Shortly before the Israeli attack, the US military had carried out airstrikes near the capital Sanaa, The Times of Israel said.
The Israeli attacks came after a Yemeni ballistic missile landed near Tel Aviv's Ben Gurion airport on Sunday, sending a plume of smoke into the air and causing panic among passengers.
In a televised statement claiming responsibility for the strike, Houthi spokesperson Yahya Saree warned airlines that Israel's main international airport was 'no longer safe for air travel'.
The Iran-backed Yemeni group has intensified missile attacks on Israel, saying they are acting in solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza. They have been firing at Israel and shipping in the Red Sea, significantly disrupting maritime trade, since Israel launched its war on Gaza in October 2023.
The war started after nearly 1,200 people were killed, most of them civilians, and 251 others taken hostage during a Hamas attack on southern Israel. Israel's air and ground assault that followed has killed 52,000 Palestinians thus far, according to health officials in the Hamas-run strip, and displaced many of its 2.2 million people.
Israel on Monday approved a plan to seize the whole of Gaza and control the flow of aid to the besieged Palestinian enclave.
Mr Netanyahu had vowed retaliation for Sunday's missile strike in Tel Aviv which escaped interception by the country's air defence systems. After the strikes on Hodeidah, Houthi official Abdul Qader al-Mortada said in an X post that Israel should wait for the "unimaginable".
In March, American president Donald Trump ordered his military to ramp up airstrikes on Yemen. The attacks have killed hundreds of people so far.
US airstrikes on an oil port in April killed 74 people and wounded 171, the Houthis said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dawn French is criticised for her 'smug dismissal' of Israeli Hamas victims by woman who lost TWO relatives to terror gunmen
Dawn French is criticised for her 'smug dismissal' of Israeli Hamas victims by woman who lost TWO relatives to terror gunmen

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Dawn French is criticised for her 'smug dismissal' of Israeli Hamas victims by woman who lost TWO relatives to terror gunmen

Actress Dawn French has been criticised by a woman who lost two of her relatives to Hamas terrorists after she published a video on social media in which she criticised Israel 's continued war in Gaza. The Vicar of Dibley star, 67, posted to X discussing her thoughts on the 'nuanced' situation, in which she dismissed reasons cited by some Israelis for the continued conflict with a simple 'no'. French appeared to criticise supporters of Israel's actions amid the ongoing war against Hamas in which almost 55,000 Gazans, many of them women and children, have been killed. Now Heidi Bachram, who lost two of her husband's cousin's immediate family after Hamas militants invaded their kibbutz on October 7, has accused French of appearing to 'minimise or dismiss the severity and horror inflicted that terrible day.' It comes as the Israel Defence Forces was again accused of killing people at an aid centre in Gaza on Saturday, and the Israeli government confirmed the body of a hostage taken on October 7 has been recovered. During the 40-second video posted earlier this week, French said: 'Complicated, no, but nuanced. But [the] bottom line is no.' Describing reasons some Israelis give for continuing the war against the backdrop of much of the population being at risk of starvation due to an ongoing aid blockade by the predominantly Jewish nation, the British comedian said: 'Yeah, but you know they did a bad thing to us... and we want that land... and we have history… Those people aren't really even people, are they?' While agreeing that the October 7 attacks were 'a bad thing', French followed each reason with the word 'no', implying Israel should halt its renewed offensive. While the video has received widespread support from those against Israeli actions, Ms Bachram was amongst several prominent figures to rail against her statement and accused her of a 'smug dismissal' of Israeli victims. In an emotional statement on X, Ms Bachram wrote: 'My husband's cousin Tsachi Idan was at home asleep when the terrorists invaded his kibbutz. The family hid in the safe room but there was no lock so he held it shut. 'The terrorists forced, at gunpoint, a local teenager to try to lure them out. When that did not work they fired at head height at the door. 'Tsachi's eldest daughter Ma'ayan was helping her father protect the family. The bullet hit her in the head and she died instantly. 'We know every detail of this horror because Hamas were live streaming and recording. 'They then held the family inside their home for five hours and it became their base of operations while they murdered and kidnapped dozens of civilians on the kibbutz. 'They marched Tsachi to Gaza covered in his child's blood. There he was held hostage for many months until at some point he was killed. His body was returned in February.' She added: 'To describe this so glibly adds to a deep well of pain.' Jewish Actress and playwright Tracy-Ann Oberman also said she was 'saddened' by the post. 'This mocking voice 'bad thing' of October 7 that Dawn (who I revere by the way) appears to be mocking involved the most horrific terrorist attack involving rape, sexual violence, burning alive child, mutilation and the taking of civilian hostages. 'Why would Dawn seem to deny that which has affected so many of us personally in the most painful way possible. 'I can mourn the horrors of the war in Gaza whilst also remembering the horrors of what started it. Is this how most of our industry feels now – Oct 7 was a 'little thing'? NO!' Reacting to those who accused her of diminishing the horrors of October 7, French posted on X and said: 'I do not say 'a little thing' . In NO WAY do I support the atrocities of Oct 7th. 'Of course not. Appalling. Horrific. But starving innocent children is not the answer. NO is the answer to ALL of it Tracy.' It comes as the Hamas-led health ministry said at least 95 Palestinians have been killed over the past 24 hours. Gaza's civil defence agency said Israeli forces have killed at least six people in a shooting incident near a US-backed aid distribution centre in the territory's south. Civil defence spokesman Mahmud Bassal said that at around 7:00 am (0400 GMT), 'six people were killed and several others wounded by the forces of the Israeli occupation near the Al-Alam roundabout' in southern Gaza's Rafah area. Gazans have massed at Al-Alam almost daily since late May to collect humanitarian aid at a centre about one kilometre (0.6 miles) away, operated by the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation. Actress and playwright Tracy-Ann Oberman said she was 'saddened' by the post Samir Abu Hadid, who was witnessed the shooting, said thousands of people had gathered near the roundabout. 'As soon as some people tried to advance towards the aid centre, the Israeli occupation forces opened fire from armoured vehicles stationed near the centre, firing into the air and then at civilians,' Abu Hadid said. The Israeli military said it was looking into the incident, the latest deadly fire near the Al-Alam aid point. The GHF began operations in late May as Israel partially eased a more than two-month blockade on the Gaza Strip. The United Nations, which has refused to cooperate with the GHF over neutrality concerns, has warned that Gaza's entire population of more than two million people was at risk of starvation. In the territory's north early Saturday, Bassal said seven people were killed in an Israeli strike that hit a house near Gaza City's Al-Shifa hospital. Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz also said today that the IDF had recovered the body of a Thai hostage taken on October 7. Nattapong Pinta's body was held by a Palestinian militant group called the Mujahedeen Brigades, and was recovered from the area of Rafah in southern Gaza, Katz said. His family in Thailand has been notified. Pinta, an agricultural worker, was abducted from Kibbutz Nir Oz, a small Israeli community near the Gaza border where a quarter of the population was killed or taken hostage during the Hamas attack that triggered the devastating war in Gaza. Israel's military said Pinta had been abducted alive and killed by his captors, who had also killed and taken to Gaza the bodies of two more Israeli-American hostages that were retrieved earlier this week. Israel has been waging a military campaign in Gaza since Hamas' incursion on October 7, 2023, in which 1,200 people were killed and 251 taken hostage. At least 20 of the remaining 55 hostages still held by Hamas are thought to be alive. According to official Hamas figures, at least 54,772 people have been killed in Gaza since the start of the war. The Israeli military issued an evacuation order on Friday for residents of parts of Gaza City ahead of an attack that 'will strike all areas from which rockets are launched'. Israel has recently stepped up its campaign in Gaza in what it says is a renewed push to defeat Hamas amid growing international calls for a negotiated ceasefire.

Body of Thai hostage recovered from Gaza, Israel says
Body of Thai hostage recovered from Gaza, Israel says

BBC News

time2 hours ago

  • BBC News

Body of Thai hostage recovered from Gaza, Israel says

Israel has retrieved the body of a Thai national taken hostage during the Hamas-led attack in October 2023, Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said the body of Nattapong Pinta was retrieved during a special operation in the Rafah area of southern Gaza on Friday. The 35-year-old was working as an agricultural labourer in southern Israel when he was kidnapped. Mr Nattapong is likely to have been killed during his first months of captivity, an Israeli military official said. Before the operation, it was not known whether he was dead or comes after the Israeli army recovered the bodies of two Israeli Americans in Gaza earlier this week. Mr Nattapong was the married father of a young son, the military official said. He had been working at Kibbutz Nir Oz to support his family in Thailand when he was captured by a militant group called the Mujahideen Israel Defense Forces said in a statement that the mission to recover his body was launched following information from the interrogation of a "captured terrorist".After reports of his recovery on Saturday, the BBC tried to reach out to Mr Nattapong's wife. She did not answer the call but texted back with a picture of her son Hostages and Missing Families Forum campaign group said the recovery comes after "20 terrible and agonising months of devastating uncertainty".The group urged the Israeli government to reach an agreement with Hamas to free the remaining Nattapong is believed to be the last remaining Thai national abducted during the 7 October 2023 attack. Five Thai hostages were released during a ceasefire earlier this year - all of them Israeli army retrieved the bodies of an elderly couple, Judy and Gadi Haggai, in the Gazan city of Khan Younis on couple were killed at the same kibbutz and their bodies were also held by the Mujahideen Brigades, according to the launched a military campaign in Gaza in response to the Hamas-led cross-border attack almost 20 months ago, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken 54 of those captured during the attack remain in captivity, including 31 the Israeli military says are least 54,677 people have been killed in Gaza during the war, according to the territory's health ministry. Additional reporting by Thanyarat Doksone

My daughter Lauren Patterson was raped and murdered in Qatar - she had wanted to leave the country and we still don't know what has happened to her killer
My daughter Lauren Patterson was raped and murdered in Qatar - she had wanted to leave the country and we still don't know what has happened to her killer

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

My daughter Lauren Patterson was raped and murdered in Qatar - she had wanted to leave the country and we still don't know what has happened to her killer

The mother of a woman who was murdered in Qatar still has no idea whether her killer has been released more than a decade on from the tragedy. Lauren Patterson was teaching at a primary school in the Qatari capital Doha when she went missing after going to a party in October 2013. Her body was found in the desert after she was raped and murdered by Badr Hashim Khamis Abdallah al-Jabr in a brutal attack. Lauren's family were told he would face a death sentence after being jailed for the 'heinous and shocking' attack in 2014. But in May 2018, the decision was overturned and he was instead given only ten-and-a-half years in jail, while Lauren's family were offered just £200,000 compensation. More than seven years on, Lauren's mother Alison, 60, is clueless as to what has happened to her daughter's killer - most crucially, if he has been freed. The loving mother, who lives in Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire, has tried for years to find answers from Qatar's authorities, but has been blocked at every turn and was even accused of plotting to kill al-Jabr. This wall of silence has left Alison unable to move on from Lauren's death, while the situation has also been a burden on the 24-year-old's friends still living in Qatar and fearing they could bump into al-Jabr at any moment. 'We have written personally to the Emir but never had a reply. We gave letters to the Qatari embassy but heard nothing,' Alison told The Sun. 'You don't move on, but you're putting a line under one part of it, you're coming to terms with he's out.' She has asked the Foreign Office and the Qatari Government to tell her whether al-Jabr is still behind bars but has been met with a 'stonewall of silence'. Alison was even accused of plotting to kill al-Jabr after she received a text message from her lawyers in Doha, saying: 'Good morning, we were accused to set up a trap to kill him when will be released.' The outlandish suggestion is rendered the more ridiculous, as she said she did not want him to face the death penalty when he was convicted of Lauren's murder. But she was later horrified when the charge was dropped to manslaughter and al-Jabr was sentenced to just ten-and-a-half years in jail for killing her and burning her body before hiding in the desert outside Doha. She and her husband Kevin, 62, believe he was released in the months leading up to the 10th anniversary of his crime and is enjoying his freedom. The couple fear he could easily run into Lauren's friends who still live in the capital - or worse, he could kill again. In the months before her death, Lauren had been thinking about moving jobs to another country as she had become 'uncomfortable' living in Qatar. 'She was feeling a little bit apprehensive, there were things she wasn't comfortable with. The school was good, she really enjoyed that. It was other things,' Alison said. When Alison's mother became seriously ill, Lauren had sought to leave the country to visit her, but was denied permission to leave by Qatari authorities. Sadly, the young teacher missed the opportunity to say goodbye and was eventually granted leave to attend her funeral. She flew back to Qatar the day after on October 11 and immediately after arriving back in her flat, her friend suggested they go out for a few drinks. Lauren barely had time to unpack her suitcase and planned to do so the next day. Tragically, she would never get the chance, as later that night she was abducted by al-Jabr and his accomplice, Muhammad Abdullah Hassan Abdul Aziz. The pair had offered to drive Lauren and her friend home after they were unable to find a taxi. The two women were on friendly terms with them both and had no idea of their vile intentions. Lauren's friend was dropped off at her home first, despite living further away than her. Lauren was raped, stabbed multiple times then taken out into the desert where she was burnt beyond recognition. Alison began to worry when she nor Lauren's friends had heard from her. They began a desperate search for the 24-year-old, which sickeningly al-Jabr also joined in with. Her body was eventually found when two falconers noticed something odd when their birds failed to return to them in the desert miles outside Doha. They went to investigate and found Lauren's burned remains with a knife still in her body. Her killer and his accomplice used petrol to set her on fire before fleeing back to the city believing their crime would never be discovered. Al-Jabr was already a suspect - he was the last person to see Lauren alive and had scratches on his face. But Qatar police believed in the adage that a killer always returns to the scene of his crime and staked out the desert spot where Lauren was found. Jabr and his Rayban-wearing accomplice Mohamed Abdallah Hassan Abdul Aziz were arrested when they drove out to the desert to check on their gruesome handiwork. While she may never get any answers, Alison is adamant to shine a light on what she believes to be an example of Qatar's shameful human rights record. She made headlines in 2022 after criticising former England soccer captain David Beckham who was paid tens of millions to back the World Cup in Qatar. Then she wrote to every footballer in the squad along with manager Gareth Southgate asking them to highlight Lauren's death by making an L-shape with their hands on the pitch. She did not receive a reply. But she and Kevin, who live near Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire, remain unrelating in the quest for justice for Lauren no matter how long it takes.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store