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Saudi-led coalition says unaware prisoners held at Yemen target site
By AFP - Sep 02,2019 - Last updated at Sep 02,2019
First responders cover the bodies of victims found under the rubble of a destroyed building that was used as a detention centre by Yemen's Houthi rebels which was hit by an air strike of the Saudi-led coalition, in Dhamar south of the Houthi-held capital Sanaa, on Sunday (AFP photo)
RIYADH — The Saudi-led military coalition fighting Yemen's Houthi rebels said Monday it was unaware that prisoners were held at a detention site it targeted with air strikes that killed dozens of people.
The United Nations and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) have condemned the attack on a former college in the city of Dhamar that the Houthis used to hold their opponents.
The coalition's spokesman Turki Al Maliki reiterated its insistence that the Houthis used the building to store drones and air defence systems.
"The [facility] was not on the 'no strike list' of sites in the city of Dhamar," he told a press conference in Riyadh.
"Some reports have quoted the ICRC as saying it has gone to the site a number of times. The coalition has never been informed... about the location.
"The Houthis bear full responsibility for making this a location for Yemeni citizens who have been forcibly disappeared."
The ICRC, which rushed to the scene with medical teams and body bags, said that every detainee in the building was killed or injured when the multi-storey facility crumbled, and that the toll could rise as high as 130.
"The facility held around 170 detainees. Forty of those detainees were being treated for injuries; the rest are presumed killed, though no toll has been confirmed," it said in a statement.
The ICRC said it had visited the detention centre in the past as part of its regular work as a neutral inspector in war zones.
“Witnessing this massive damage, seeing the bodies lying among the rubble was a real shock. Anger and sadness were natural reactions,” Franz Rauchenstein, its head of delegation for Yemen, said in a statement.
“People who are not taking active part in combat should not die in such a way,” he said after travelling to the attack site.
Casualties ‘staggering’
The Saudi-led coalition intervened in 2015 to support the government after the Iran-linked Houthis swept out of their northern stronghold to seize Sanaa and much of Yemen — the Arab world’s poorest nation.
Fighting since then has already claimed tens of thousands of lives and sparked what the United Nations calls the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.
Footage obtained by AFP showed heavy damage to the building and several bodies lying in the rubble, as bulldozers worked to clear away huge piles of debris.
The UN’s humanitarian coordinator in Yemen has called Sunday’s air strike “horrific” and said aid groups had been forced to divert critical medical supplies, intended for treating a cholera outbreak, to Dhamar hospitals.
“We have no choice,” Lise Grande said. “The scale of the casualties is staggering.”
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