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Violence continues in Yemen despite UN talk of deal

Despite news that both sides will sign a deal on Sunday to end the fighting, clashes in Yemen raged overnight and Sunday morning
UN envoy to Yemen Jamal Benomar (C), said both sides have reached a deal to end the fighting (AFP)
Clashes raged again on Sunday in the Yemeni capital Sanaa between government army and Shiite Houthi militants after a few hours of lull with strong explosions being heard in the city.
 
An Anadolu Agency correspondent reported that clashes re-erupted between the two sides on Al-Khamseen Street in northern Sana'a.
 
Plumes of smoke are towering over the area amid fierce fighting between the two sides, an AA reporter said. Casualties have not yet been reported.
 
AFP reports that the fighting centred on the campus of Al-Iman University, a bastion of Sunni hardliners that the Shiite rebels have been trying to capture, according to witnesses. Fighting appears to have switched from shelling to predominantly gun fight. Black smoke rising from Firqa area. #Yemen
 
The clashes came hours before the signing of a deal announced by UN envoy to Yemen Jamal Benomar to end the crisis that has paralyzed the country for weeks.
 
Benomar said Saturday that Yemeni parties had reached a deal to end the confrontation and it would be signed on Sunday. He said that after "intense consultations with all the political parties, including (rebel movement) Ansarullah," a deal was ready to be signed but did notgive further details about the agreement. 
 
On Saturday, Yemen's higher security committee imposed a nighttime curfew in several neighborhoods of northern Sanaa.
 
The committee cited what it described as "security situation developments" and takeover by Shiite Houthi militants of the headquarters of the Yemeni state television in the capital for its decision.
 
It said in a statement that the curfew would start from 9:00pm local time (18:00 GMT) and come to an end at 6:00am local time (03:00 GMT) every day from Saturday.
 
Yemen state television returned on air late on Saturday, almost half an hour after it went off air following its takeover by Houthi militants.
 
The television had to resume its broadcast from an alternative site, according to a television official, who refused to mention information about this alternative site.
 
The Houthis have been staging mass protests since mid-August to demand the dismissal of Prime Minister Mohamed Basindawa's government and the reversal of a recent government decision to slash fuel subsidies.
 
Demonstrations turned deadly earlier this month after protesters camped outside government buildings and blocked key roads in the capital to press their demands. Since then, army troops and Shiite Houthi militants have engaged in deadly fighting in several parts of the capital.
 
President Abd Rabbuh Mansour Hadi had already offered to sack the government, inviting the Houthis to take part in the formation of a unity government. He also offered to reduce fuel prices.
 
According to Hadi's proposal, however, the president would retain the right to directly appoint the ministers of "strategic" government portfolios (interior, defense and foreign affairs).
 
The Houthis, for their part, rejected Hadi's offer and vowed to escalate protests further.
 
Yemen has been dogged by unrest since a popular uprising that began in 2011 ousted longstanding president Ali Abdullah Saleh one year later.
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