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The Yemeni civil war of 1994 (Arabic: الحرب الأهلية اليمنية (1994)), known in Yemen as the 1994 Summer War (Arabic: حرب صيف 1994), was a civil war fought between the two Yemeni forces of the pro-union northern and the socialist separatist southern Yemeni states and their supporters.
North Yemen Civil War: 188: 9 April 1964 9–0–2 (abstentions: United Kingdom and the United States) British attacks in Yemen and airspace violation of Federation of South Arabia: 243: 12 December 1967 Unanimous Admission of Democratic Yemen: 924: 1 June 1994 Unanimous 1994 civil war in Yemen: 931: 29 June 1994 Unanimous 1994 civil war in ...
1994 1997 Iraqi Kurdish Civil War. Part of the Iraqi–Kurdish conflict. PUK. INC PKK KCP Iran (from 1995) SCIRI Supported by: United States (from 1996) KDP. Iraq Turkey PDKI Iran (until 1995) 1994 1994 Yemeni Civil War (1994) Yemen: Democratic Republic of Yemen: 1994 2024 Armenian-Azerbaijani border conflict Part of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
United Nations Security Council resolution 931, adopted unanimously on 29 June 1994, after recalling Resolution 924 (1994) on the civil war in Yemen, the Council considered the findings of the fact-finding mission deployed to the country and demanded a ceasefire.
Yemen's Houthis have joined the Israel-Hamas war raging more than 1,000 miles from their seat of power in the Yemeni capital of Sanaa, declaring on Oct. 31 they had fired drones and missiles at ...
Escalation into full-scale civil war. Arrival of ISIL to Yemen [12] First Sa'dah War (2004) Yemen: Houthis: Government victory. Death of Hussein al-Houthi; Second Sa'dah War (2005) Yemen: Houthis: Government victory. Houthis surrender after signing a deal [13] Third Sa'dah War (2005–2006) Yemen: Houthis: Government victory. Fighting ends ...
The residents on these mountaintop villages are safe from Yemen's infamous conflict, but that doesn't mean their lives are simple. In Yemen's remote mountains, war - and progress - remain distant ...
“The end of the war is clear-cut. The only thing that is not clear is the means by which it’s achieved and the timing,” Chris Sidoti, an international human rights consultant and a founding ...