SANAA – Yemen’s Houthi rebels held a funeral on Monday for their prime minister and 11 other senior officials killed in an Israeli air strike that penetrated the Iran-backed group.
Twelve coffins draped in flags were displayed at Sanaa’s Al-Shaab mosque, as masked gunmen patrolled the area and thousands of mourners flooded in.
Yemen's Huthis hold funeral for PM killed in Israeli strike
Houthi prime minister Ahmed Ghaleb Nasser al-Rahawi, nine ministers and two cabinet officials were killed as they attended a government meeting in the Sanaa area on Thursday.
It was the highest profile assassination to be announced in months of attacks by Israel during the Gaza war.
The US also waged an intense bombing campaign against Houthi targets from March to May this year., This news data comes from:http://pb-omqr-qbog-jbs.771bg.com
The Houthis also fired a missile at an Israeli tanker in the Red Sea on Sunday, reprising a campaign they have waged throughout the Gaza war.
The missile landed close to the Liberian-flagged Scarlet Ray with a “loud bang”, the UK Maritime Trade Operations monitoring agency said.
‘Bad Day’ for Houthis

The Houthis, part of Iran’s “axis of resistance” of anti-Israeli groups, vowed to step up their attacks on Israel following Thursday’s killings.
They have been firing missiles and drones at Israel and shipping in the Red Sea, a major cargo route, throughout the Gaza war, claiming solidarity with the Palestinians.
Yemen's Huthis hold funeral for PM killed in Israeli strike
Last week’s Israeli strike wiped out about half of the 22-strong Houthi cabinet, which plays a mainly administrative role.
Rahawi, the late prime minister, was from the southern province of Abyan, which is not part of the large swathes of Yemen under Huthi control.
The Houthis, who hail from divided Yemen’s rugged north, have traditionally reserved the premiership for southerners in an attempt to win hearts and minds.
US-based Yemen analyst Mohammed Al Basha said Thursday’s strike may signal an Israeli shift towards targeted killings, an approach that gutted the leadership of Gaza rulers Hamas and Hezbollah in Lebanon.
The attack could mark “the beginning of a campaign of targeted assassinations against both civilian and military Houthi leadership, even at informal gatherings”, he posted on X, calling it a “bad day” for the group.
- Gaza at 'breaking point,' says UN food agency chief after visit
- 500 Internal Server Error
- Modi: India, Japan to 'shape the Asian century'
- New Quezon City judge to oversee Dengvaxia vaccine cases, sets hearing
- Trough of LPA, ‘habagat’ will bring rain showers, thunderstorms across PH
- Rep. Tiangco reveals P17B flood control allocations linked to former appropriations chairman Rep. Zaldy Co
- Police general suspended for ‘obstruction’ of evidence in case of missing sabungeros
- UK's mass facial-recognition roll-out alarms rights groups
- Nartatez to reassign Torre if he won't retire, says they're 'okay'
- Manila mayor warns against mobs, orders police to maintain peace and order