Yemen's Houthis attack Saudi border
Saudi Arabia said its forces on Thursday killed dozens of Houthi fighters from Yemen who launched their first major attack on the kingdom since Saudi-led airstrikes began last month.
Three Saudi soldiers also died in the battle after the rebels targeted their observation posts, the defence ministry said, as its army repelled the assault.
There have been deadly skirmishes before but this is the first time the Saudi military has reported a full-scale Houthi attack on its borders.
Thursday's attacks brought the Saudi death toll to 14 over the course of the GCC’s military campaign, the BBC reported.
Gulf foreign ministers on Thursday meanwhile rejected a proposal to hold talks on neutral ground between rival Yemeni political forces, while an expert UN report said Iran has been shipping weapons to the Houthis since at least 2009.
The UN is trying to bring an end to the weeks-long air campaign and return to peace talks.
After a meeting in Riyadh, the Gulf ministers insisted that talks between Yemen's political factions be held in Saudi Arabia, which leads an Arab coalition that has been bombing the Shiite militia since late March.
Iran has proposed holding UN talks on ending the war in Yemen in a neutral country, one not represented in the coalition.
But in a statement after talks at a Riyadh airbase the six Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states "affirmed their support to intensive efforts by the legitimate Yemeni government to hold a conference under the umbrella of the GCC secretariat in Riyadh".
The conference would be attended by "all Yemeni parties and components supporting legitimacy as well as Yemen's security and stability", said GCC secretary general Abdullatif al-Zayani.
Thursday's meeting aimed to lay the groundwork for a GCC leaders' summit on Tuesday, which will also be attended by French President Francois Hollande.
The GCC includes regional heavyweight Saudi Arabia along with Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates.
All but Oman belong to the coalition, whose warplanes pressed their attacks on rebel positions as the ministers met for about three hours in a chandeliered room.
'Pattern of shipments'
The airstrikes began in late March when the Houthis and their allies advanced on the main southern city of Aden, where President Abd Rabbuh Mansour Hadi fled after the rebels seized large parts of the country including Sanaa.
Hadi escaped to Riyadh, which fears an Iran-friendly regime taking control of its southern neighbour.
Iran has denied charges of arming the rebels, called for an end to the strikes and pushed for a negotiated settlement.
But a report by a panel of experts presented to the UN Security Council last week, and seen by AFP, said there has been "a pattern of arms shipments to Yemen by sea that can be traced back to at least 2009".
The conflict has heightened tensions in the region.
Iran said two of its destroyers sent to the Gulf of Aden had reached the entrance of Bab al-Mandab, a strategic strait between Yemen and Djibouti.
Tehran stressed the warships would stay out of the territorial waters of other countries.
The coalition has imposed an air and sea blockade on Yemen.
Rulers of GCC countries - many of which have taken part in a US-led air campaign against the Islamic State (IS) group in Iraq and Syria - are preparing to meet US President Barack Obama in mid-May.
In a sign of the gains made by the militants who have capitalised on the country's chaos, IS claimed to have beheaded or shot dead 15 Yemeni soldiers, according to SITE Intelligence Group, a US monitor.
IS claimed its first attacks in Yemen on 20 March.
Fuel shortages threaten aid efforts
Despite an announcement last week that the campaign was moving into a new phase, daily coalition airstrikes continued, hitting Houthi locations in the southern port city of Aden and elsewhere, as pro- and anti-government forces battled on the ground.
The Houthis have refused to withdraw from seized territory in defiance of a Security Council resolution imposing an arms embargo and sanctions on their leaders.
The Shiite fighters have allied with troops loyal to former strongman Ali Abdullah Saleh, clashing with militia in Aden known as Popular Resistance units loyal to Hadi.
The UN says about half of the more than 1,000 people killed since late March were civilians, and millions of people have been affected by the conflict.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon expressed concern about the impact of the fighting in Yemen on civilians, as airstrikes by a Saudi-led coalition hit Houthi strongholds.
"There are credible reports of families in Aden trapped by the bombardment and snipers targeting civilians in the street," Ban said in a statement issued from his spokesperson's office.
Additionally, half the population is short of food but a lack of fuel threatens to halt emergency ration deliveries, the UN said.
The UN's World Food Programme (WFP) on Thursday said it had to withdraw from the Hudaydah province in the west of the country after running out of fuel.
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