Saudi-led coalition threatens retaliation against Iran over Houthi missiles
Saudi forces said they intercepted seven missiles on Sunday, including over the capital Riyadh, in a deadly escalation that coincided with the third anniversary of the coalition's intervention in Yemen.
Displaying wreckage at a news conference in Riyadh of what it said were fragments of those missiles, the coalition claimed forensic analysis showed they were supplied to Houthi rebels by their ally Iran.
We "reserve the right to respond against Iran at the right time and right place", coalition spokesman Turki al-Malki told reporters.
The missile strikes resulted in the first reported fatality from Huthi fire in the Saudi capital.
Egyptian national Abdul-Moteleb Ahmed, 38, died instantly in his bed when what appeared to be burning shrapnel struck his ramshackle room in Riyadh's Um al-Hammam district, leaving a gaping hole in the roof, witnesses told by AFP at the site.
Three other Egyptian labourers in the same room were wounded and hospitalised, they said.
The Huthis said on their Al-Masirah television that Riyadh's King Khalid International Airport was among the targets.
Malki alleged the Iran-aligned Houthi rebels in Sanaa were using the airport there to launch missiles on Saudi territory, adding the coalition had targeted a "missiles shipment" at the facility.
Iran has repeatedly rejected claims it is arming the rebels.
Show of strength
A Saudi-led military coalition intervened in Yemen on March 26, 2015 to try to restore the government of President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi after the Shia Houthis and their allies took over large parts of the country, including the capital Sanaa.
Hours after the missile attacks on Saudi Arabia, hundreds of thousands of Houthi rebel supporters flooded the streets of Yemen's capital Monday to mark three years of war.
Sanaa's Sabaeen Square was a sea of Yemeni flags as rebel authorities ordered all schools and government offices shut for the anniversary.
Houthi supporters carried portraits of rebel chief Abdulmalik al-Houthi and speakers blasted out a fiery speech by Hassan Nasrallah, leader of Lebanon's powerful Hizballah Shia movement, praising the "steadfastness" of the Yemeni people.
War songs, poems and speeches condemning the United States, the main arms supplier for the Saudi-led coalition, echoed across the square.
"No one can speak on behalf of the Yemeni people. The people taking to the streets today are the real voice," Ibtisam al-Mutawakel, head of a Houthi cultural committee, told AFP.
About 10,000 Yemenis have been killed and 53,000 wounded since the start of the coalition intervention in Yemen, which triggered what the United Nations has called the world's worst humanitarian crisis.
Despite the intervention the rebels remain in control of the capital, northern Yemen and the country's largest port.
'Possible war crime'
Amnesty International, which has criticised both sides in the Yemen war for neglecting civilian safety, on Monday said the "indiscriminate" Houthi missile attack "could constitute a war crime".
The rights group has also slammed the Saudi-led alliance for possible war crimes in Yemen.
Britain urged Iran to "stop sending in weapons which prolong the conflict", while Tehran accused London - a key arms supplier for Saudi Arabia - of hypocrisy.
The US State Department said Washington would support the Saudis' "right to defend their borders against these threats".
Rebel leaders have sought to highlight the role of the United States in the Saudi-led intervention.
At Monday's rally, Saleh al-Sammad, head of the rebels' Supreme Political Council, said the rebels were "ready to reach an understanding" to end the intervention and the coalition's blockade of Yemen.
"It is the Americans who are directing this aggression and participating directly on a number of fronts," Sammad told the rally.
The Hadi government, for its part, said Monday that the overnight attacks on Saudi Arabia amounted to "an open rejection of peace".
The US Senate last week rejected a bipartisan bid to end American involvement in Yemen's war, voting down a rare effort to overrule presidential military authorisation.
The US has provided weapons, intelligence and aerial refuelling to the Saudi-led coalition.
Washington formally approved defence contracts worth more than $1 billion with Riyadh last Thursday during a high-profile visit by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.