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Al Houthi supporters display posters of rebel leaders for sale at a protest camp erected near the Interior Ministry in Sana’a yesterday Image Credit: EPA

Sana’a: At least 12 people were killed in fierce overnight clashes between army-backed Yemeni tribes and Al Houthi rebels pressing a protest campaign against the government, tribal sources said on Saturday.

Fighting raged in Jawf province north of Sana’a as rebels sought to seize routes to the capital where their supporters have staged weeks of escalating protests against the central government.

Tribal sources said fighting in the Ghayl and Majzar regions straddling Jawf and Marib, east of Sana’a, killed 12 people, raising the death toll from clashes since Thursday to 34.

Twenty soldiers and tribesmen and 14 rebels were killed, the sources said.

Rebels used tanks and artillery against government forces and tribesmen defending the area, tribal sources said, insisting that the offensive was repelled.

The death toll could not be verified with independent sources or to obtain rebel confirmation of their deaths.

Analysts say the rebels, also known as Zaidis or Ansar Allah, are trying to establish themselves as the dominant political force in the northern highlands, where Shiites are the majority community in the mainly Sunni Arabian Peninsula nation.

Al Houthis held protests throughout much of August to push for the government’s resignation.

They have rejected overtures from President Abd Rabbo Mansour Hadi to name a new prime minister, replace the government and reduce a disputed fuel price hike.