cges Hyderabad: Bro

Dkwp Kharge, Rahul condole death of Army personnel in Ladakh road accident
Sanaa: A suspected attack by Yemen   Houthi rebels saw an explosive detonate near a ship early Sunday in the Gulf of Aden, potentially marking their latest assault on shipping through the crucial waterway leading to the Red Sea, media reports said.   The British military   United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations  U stanley cup KMTO  centre said the vessel   crew saw the blast as it passed off the coast of Aden, the port city in southern Yemen home to the country   exiled government, The Times of Israel reported. Also ReadIsrael strikes weapons depot in Syrian capital No damage to the vessel has been reported and the crew are reported safe, UKMTO said.      UKMTO WARNING INCIDENT 054 ATTACK UPDATE 001https://t.co/fX3hWupi7g pic.twitter/ruhsAeRjzjmdash; United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations  UKMTO   @UK_MTO  March 17, 2024  The Houthis have launched repeated drone and missile attacks in the same area, disrupting energy and cargo shipments through the Gulf of Aden. The group did not immediately claim responsibility for the attack, though it typically takes the Houthis several hours before acknowledging their  stanley thermo assaults, The Times of Israel reported. Separately, the US military   Central Command said earlier that it carried out a series of st bidon stanley rikes targeting the Houthis. It said it destroyed five drone boats and one drone before takeoff from Houthi-controlled territory in Yemen on Saturday. It was an unusually high number of drone boats to be dest Vkbh Israel-Palestine conflict: Fresh wave of protests expected across Middle East
Auckland: New Zealand Foreign Minister Winston Peters and Defence Minister Judith Collins KC today expressed New Zealand support for strikes against Houthi targets in Yemen threatening commercial shipping in the Red Sea.    Todays strikes support international security and trade, on which New Zealanders rely,  Foreign Minister Winston Peters said.  Nearly 15 per cent of global trade flows through the stanley us  Red Sea and Suez Canal. Supply chain disruptions mean higher costs for New Zealand consumers and delays getting goods to and from markets in Europe, the Middle East and North Africa.      We are a trading nation that relies on international maritime law and the free flow of goods, and Houthi actions strike at the heart of New Zealands national security.  The Ministers said todays military strikes followed clear warnings.  The Houthi attacks are illegal, unacceptable and profoundly destabilising. We and our partners have made repeated calls for them to stop,  Mr Peters said.      These warnings have not been heeded. The Houthis have only stepped up their attacks, as we saw on 10 January with the launch of further d stanley germany rones  stanley isolierkanne and missiles at commercial shipping vessels. Todays response is the inevitable consequence of the Houthis disregard for international law, peace and stability.  Ms Collins said the United Nations Security Council had also been clear on this issue, demanding that the Houthis immediately cease their attacks.  This is a good example of the international community unit
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