The administration of American president Donald Trump announced a major military offensive against the Houthis a few weeks ago.
The United States has carried out more air strikes in the capital of Yemen Sanaa, after having targeted the island of the island of Kamaran and Marib earlier, report the Houthi media.
No details on the victims have yet been provided.
In Sanaa, two US air strikes have targeted the Attan area, which has been controlled by the rebel movement since 2014. US air strikes have also targeted a sanitation project in the Asir region, as well as the Furwah district and a popular market in the Shoub district, according to Houthi’s media.
The strikes on Sunday occur a day after the launch of the United States on the port and Hodeidah airport, and three days after his deadliest attack to date, he targeted Port Ras Isa, also in Hodeidah, killing at least 80 people and injuring more than 150.
The areas held by the Houthis in Yemen have been subjected to almost daily air strikes by Washington. The civilians were targeted, the families annihilated, the destroyed military sites and the soldiers killed.
More than 200 people have been killed since the administration of US President Donald Trump announced a major military offensive against the Houthis in March. He said the air strikes aim to force the group to stop threatening ships sailing on the Red Sea on a crucial itinerary for international trade.
Since November 2023, the Houthis has launched more than 100 attacks against ships which, according to them, are linked to Israel in response to the War of Israel against Gaza and in solidarity with the Palestinians.
The Houthi attacks have paralyzed the shipment via the Suez Canal, a vital navigable track through which around 12% of world shipping traffic normally passes, forcing many companies to resort to expensive alternative routes around the CAP of good humor in South Africa.
The Houthis interrupted the attacks on the shipping routes during a two-month ceasefire in Gaza earlier this year. But they promised to resume strikes after Israel renewed his assault against the besieged enclave last month.
The Houthis, also known as Ansar Allah or “supporters of God”, emerged in the 1990s, but took importance in 2014 when they seized Sanaa and forced President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi to flee the country.