U.N. Aid Flight Carrying Journalists Barred from Yemen

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A Saudi-led coalition fighting in Yemen has barred a United Nations aid flight from heading to the country's rebel-held capital with journalists on board, the U.N. and Yemen's government said Wednesday.

"The coalition suspended the U.N. flight leaving Djibouti for Sanaa on Tuesday as there were three BBC journalists on board," Saleh Humeidi, a top official with Yemen's information ministry, told AFP. 

Saudi Arabia leads a pro-government military coalition which is fighting Iran-backed Huthi rebels for control of the impoverished country. 

The conflict has killed more than 8,000 people and displaced three million since the coalition intervened in 2015. 

The coalition has imposed an air embargo on areas controlled by Huthi rebels and their allies, former troops loyal to ex-president Ali Abdullah Saleh -- including the capital Sanaa. 

International organizations require clearance to deliver aid to the country, which the U.N. says is the world's biggest humanitarian crisis. 

The U.N. on Wednesday confirmed that the flight had been canceled despite all those on board having the required visas. 

"We confirm that the coalition canceled yesterday the Djibouti-Sanaa U.N. flight because of a BBC team on the manifest, asking for the flight to be rescheduled without the journalists," said Ahmed Ben Lassoued, Yemen spokesman for the U.N.'s humanitarian coordination office, UNOCHA. 

Ben Lassoued said the journalists had secured visas from both sides of Yemen's conflict -- government and rebel authorities -- and shared their itinerary with the Saudi-led coalition. 

The information ministry of Yemen's internationally recognized government, based in second city Aden, said it "regrets the U.N. attempt" to put journalists on the flight.

Authorities "feared for the safety of the journalists," it said.

The BBC did not immediately comment.

Yemen's conflict has pushed seven million people to the brink of famine, according to the U.N. 

The country has also been hit by a deadly cholera outbreak that has claimed more than 1,740 lives since late April.