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Missile Attack Kills 9 at Military Parade in Yemen's South

Reuters

   SANAA, YEMEN - A ballistic missile attack ripped through a military
   parade for a Yemeni southern separatist group that's backed by the
   United Arab Emirates, killing at least six troops and three children, a
   spokesman said Sunday.

   The explosion took place while the separatists, known as the Resistance
   Forces, were finishing a parade for new recruits at a soccer field in
   the capital of Dhale province, said Maged al-Shoebi, a spokesman for
   the group, who spoke with The Associated Press by phone.
   The southern separatists are allied with the Saudi-led coalition that's
   been fighting Yemen's Houthi rebels. But the UAE-backed southerners are
   currently at odds with Yemen's internationally recognized government,
   which is more closely allied with Saudi Arabia. Cracks within the
   anti-Houthi bloc have widened over the past several months.
   Footage circulated online of Sunday's attack showing a hole in a stage
   at the edge of the field, apparently from an explosion, while other
   footage showed dead bodies on the ground.
   More than 20 people including civilians were wounded in the blast,
   al-Shoebi said. He blamed the Houthis for the attack. The rebel group
   did not immediately comment.
   The Houthis have been trying to wrest Dhale province from the southern
   separatists for years, but without much progress.
   The conflict in Yemen began with the 2014 takeover of Sanaa by the
   Houthi rebels. They drove out the government of President Abed Rabbo
   Mansour Hadi, forcing him to flee to the south and eventually to Saudi
   Arabia, which entered the war in 2015.
   The fighting in the Arab world's poorest country has killed over
   100,000 people and left millions suffering from food and medical
   shortages. The conflict has also pushed the country to the brink of
   famine.