According to Yemeni TV Channel ‘Al Masirah’, Saudi air attacks on Taiz and Saada Provinces claimed the lives of seven civilians and injured some others.

The death toll of the attacks on Majz District, Saada climbed to six people , with four  more being  injured. 

In an attack on a house in Al Barah, in Taiz , one Yemeni civilian was killed and a number of others were injured.

One  Yemeni  civilian interviewed by  IRIB correspondent said:  "Yemeni people are being massacred by the Saudis in this war of aggression. They ( the Saudis ) want to destroy  the Yemeni people and the infrastructure of the country. Attacks on  civilians,  women and children, have no  justification whatsoever."

He went on to say that Saudis have violated human rights as well as international conventions. He also condemned Saudis  for attacking people of Yemen using internationally outlawed  weaponry, such as cluster munitions.

Another Yemeni citizen interviewed by IRIB said:  "We have achieved  great victorious  in  recent days in Yemen's west coast,  and the area has turned out  to be a  graveyard  for  the aggressors and we warn the Saudis of this very fact."

Earlier in the day, Yemeni army forces, backed by allied fighters from Popular Committees, fired a domestically-designed and -developed ballistic missile at a military base in Saudi Arabia’s southwestern border region of Najran in retaliation to the Saudi aggression against their country.

A Yemeni military source, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the short-range Badr-1 missile struck Mostahadeth base with great precision.

The Saudi air force later claimed to have intercepted the ballistic missile.

Colonel Turki al-Maliki, a spokesman for the Saudi-led military coalition engaged in the war on Yemen, said the missile was detected at 00:39 a.m. local time on Friday morning.

On Thursday, Yemeni snipers shot and killed seven Saudi and Sudanese troopers as they launched attacks against their positions in Saudi Arabia’s Jizan region, located approximately 970 kilometers (602 miles) southwest of the capital Riyadh.

The Yemeni Ministry of Human Rights announced in a statement on March 25 that the Saudi-led war had left 600,000 civilians dead and injured since March 2015.

The United Nations says a record 22.2 million Yemenis are in need of food aid, including 8.4 million threatened by severe hunger.

A high-ranking UN aid official recently warned against the “catastrophic” living conditions in Yemen, stating that there was a growing risk of famine and cholera there.

“People's lives have continued unraveling. Conflict has escalated since November driving an estimated 100,000 people from their homes,” John Ging, UN director of aid operations, told the UN Security Council on February 27.

Ging said cholera had infected 1.1 million people in Yemen since last April, and a new outbreak of diphtheria had occurred in the war-ravaged Arab country since 1982.

Saudi Arabia and its regional allies attacked Yemen in March 2015 to bring back to power the deposed president of Yemen Abdrabbuh Mansour Hadi. Thousands of Yemenis have been killed in the attacks conducted by the Saudi-US coalition and more than 2,000 have died due to a cholera epidemic.