Leader of Yemen's Houthi militias Abdulmalik al-Houthi called Wednesday on his supporters who had fled Yemeni battlefronts to rejoin the ranks of the insurgents.
In a speech in which he looked rather confused, al-Houthi called for general mobilization against an operation launched by the Saudi-led Arab Coalition in Yemen's Red Sea port city of Hodeidah.
"I call upon all free men … to head to the fronts to defend the port city," he said in a speech aired by the Houthi-run Al Masirah satellite TV channel.
"It is a big battlefield stretching 2,000 km along the Red Sea coast," he said.
His speech made no reference about any desire for peace.
For its part, the Yemeni government warned from Houthi plots to bomb government buildings and national institutions like the Port of Hodeidah, and terrorist plans of targeting international maritime trade navigation at Bab al-Mandab and the south of the Red Sea, and bombing Safer Oil Tank at Ras Isa Port, which contains nearly a million barrel of crude oil and can cause environment and economic catastrophe to Yemen and the regional countries.
Government spokesperson Rajeh Badi said Houthis have placed heavy weapons in populated areas and damaged highways to hamper the delivery of humanitarian aid.
On Wednesday, pro-government forces said they had made further advances on Hodeidah after fierce battles that have killed nearly 200 fighters in the past week.
In the past 24 hours, 27 Iran-backed Houthi rebels and 12 pro-government fighters have been killed on the outskirts of Hodeidah city, a medical source told AFP on Wednesday.
Hodeidah, considered a crucial port city for aid delivery and food imports to Yemen, was seized by the rebels along with the capital Sanaa in 2014.
Separately, a Yemeni source said that during a meeting held last Tuesday, the self-proclaimed Houthi Supreme Political Council threatened the remaining council members to blow up their homes in case they try to escape towards government-controlled areas.
They also threatened to deal harshly with their family members in Sanaa, the source said.