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Five killed as air strike hits Yemen school: Medics

Saudi Arabia has been frequently criticised for inflicting civilian casualties during its war against Houthi rebels in Yemen
Smoke billows in the distance as Yemeni pro-government forces patrol during clashes against Shiite rebels in Yemen's western Dhubab district (AFP)

An air strike by the Saudi-led coalition on a primary school in rebel-held northern Yemen on Tuesday killed five people including two children, medical and military sources said.

The headmaster and two other staff members were among those killed in the air raid in the district of Nihm, northeast of the capital Sanaa, which also left 13 wounded, the sources said.

A medical source at Kuwait Hospital in Sanaa confirmed the casualty toll.

A government military official said the school was hit by two missiles by mistake, accusing the Shia Houthi rebels of keeping armoured vehicles nearby.

Rights groups have repeatedly criticised the coalition over the civilian casualties inflicted by its air strikes on rebel-held regions.

In August, an air strike on a Quranic school in the northern Saada province killed 10 children and wounded 28 others, prompting a UN call for a swift investigation.

The Saudi-led coalition launched a military campaign against the Iranian-backed rebels in March 2015 in support of President Abd Rabbuh Hadi who is in exile in Riyadh. 

More than 7,000 people have been killed in the conflict, according to the United Nations.

However a recent report by the UN's children's agency UNICEF said that at least 1000 children were dying each week due to the humanitarian crisis caused by the war.

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