Local sources told the Yemen Post that violent Clashes have been ongoing between Houthi's Shiite rebels and Salafi's groups since Tuesday night in Dmaj area of the governorate of Sa'ada.
At least 16 people died and other five injured from the two warring sides so far, the same sources said, adding that the violent clashes renewed after Houthi's followers infringed a cease-fire signed between the two sides two days earlier.
For his part, Information Minister and the Yemeni government spokesman, Hassan Al-Lawzi, said that the Doha-brokered peace deal signed by the Yemeni government and Houthis on February 1, 2008 was over, saying that the Yemeni government willingly began implementing cease-fire agreement but said Houthis did not abide by its conditions.
This came following president Saleh political consultant Abdul Karim Al-Iriani's visit to Doha to disclose Yemen's stance on Doha-brokered peace deal which Houthis have claimed to be a condition for the cease-fire.
However, Houthi's rebel's spokesman, Mohamed Abdul Slam, said that his group was abiding by the Doha cease-fire agreement, accusing the Yemeni government of avoiding a radical solution to the conflict between the two sides.
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) called on the main block parties in Yemen represented by the Joint Meeting Parties (JMP) to show serious and sincere efforts to convince Houthis to abide by Yemeni authorities' six conditions that need to be fulfilled so as to cease fire in Sa'ada.
Yemeni Women's Union Chairwoman, Ramzia Al-Iriani described Al-Houthi's crimes and violence against women in Sa'ada as an invisible epidemic."Houthi's elements killed a pregnant women and injured her three daughters in Haidan county," Al-Iriani said.
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