HODEIDA, Yemen: Yemen’s Houthi rebels on Sunday promised a "huge” retaliation against the Zionist entity following a deadly strike on the port of Hodeida, as regional fallout widens from months of war in Gaza. The Zionist strike, the first claimed by the Zionist entity in Yemen, came a day after the first fatal attack by the Houthis in the Zionist entity. On Sunday, the Zionist entity said it intercepted a missile fired from Yemen and struck targets in southern Lebanon. Residents of southern Gaza reported combat in the Rafah area.

The fighting across the region comes as Washington, the Zionist entity’s chief military supplier, says a deal to end more than nine months of war between the Zionist entity and Palestinian group Hamas is near the "goal line”. But Saudi Arabia’s foreign

try warned the Zionist entity’s attack on Hodeida "aggravates the current tension in the region and halts the ongoing efforts to end the war in Gaza.”

Dozens have been killed since Saturday across Gaza, the civil defense agency in the Hamas-run territory said, including in strikes on homes in the central Nuseirat and Bureij areas and near southern Khan Yunis. Residents said a major operation was underway in a district west of Rafah, where they reported heavy artillery and clashes.

On Sunday, Abdul Malik Al-Houthi, chief of the Iran-backed group, said the strikes on Hodeida would lead to "further escalation and more attacks targeting (the Zionist entity)” after the deadly Houthi drone strike on Tel Aviv changed the rules of engagement and opened "a new phase” in operations. Houthi military spokesperson Yahya Saree said earlier that the rebels’ "response to the (Zionist) aggression against our country is inevitably coming and will be huge.”

Zionist Defence Minister Yoav Gallant said the fire left raging by the strikes on rebel-held Hodeida port "is seen across the Middle East and the significance is clear”. Gallant warned of further operations if the Houthis "dare to attack us” after the Houthi drone strike hit Tel Aviv, at least 1,800 km from Yemen. It appeared to be the first to pierce the Zionist entity’s intricate air defenses.

The Houthis control swathes of Yemen, including much of its Red Sea coast. In Hodeida, six people were killed and 83 wounded, health officials said in an updated statement carried by Houthi media. Firefighters struggled to contain the massive blaze caused by the strike. A port employee said fuel storage tanks and a power plant were still burning on Sunday.

Analysts say the strike on Hodeida will likely only embolden the Houthis. Since January the rebels have already withstood repeated United States and British strikes aimed at deterring repeated Houthi attacks on shipping. Nearly a decade of war against forces backing Yemen’s internationally-recognized government has also failed to weaken the rebels’ hold, even though they were hit by thousands of air raids.

On Sunday, the Zionist military said it had intercepted a missile fired from Yemen towards the Red Sea resort town of Eilat. The rebel spokesman said ballistic missiles were fired towards the port. In Lebanon, Iran-backed and Hamas allied Hezbollah said it fired Katyusha rockets at the Zionist entity after Zionist strikes hit a weapons depot and wounded six civilians. Hezbollah said the Zionist entity’s strikes on its Yemeni allies marked "a new, dangerous phase”.

The Zionist entity has killed at least 38,983 people in Gaza, mostly women and children. The war has left most of Gaza’s population displaced, much of the infrastructure including housing destroyed, and essential goods in short supply. The Zionist entity has started vaccinating its troops in Gaza against polio and supplying vaccines for the Palestinian population after health agencies said the virus has been found in the territory, the military said on Sunday. Many more diseases are "spreading out of control” inside Gaza, a World Health Organization spokesman said on Friday.

The war has brought Zionists to the streets, sometimes in their tens of thousands, demanding a deal to free remaining hostages. "Bring them home,” demonstrator Ofira Azrieli said Saturday in Tel Aviv, appealing to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Netanyahu is due to address US lawmakers Wednesday in Washington, where he will be under pressure to reach a ceasefire with Hamas. He will meet President Joe Biden on Tuesday, his office said. – Agencies