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Saudi soldiers get Yemen war bonus from king

Border Guards Corporal Mishari al-Shahrani, the latest Saudi casualty, was killed during an exchange of fire with Houthis shooting from Yemen
Deputy Crown Prince and Minister of Defence Mohammed bin Salman breaking the Ramadan fast with Saudi airforce officers in Najran, a border city with Yemen late on 29 June, 2016 (AFP PHOTO / HO / SAUDI ROYAL PALACE)

Saudi soldiers on the front lines of the war in Yemen are getting a month's extra salary from King Salman, official media said as combat claimed another trooper's life.

The bonus comes after an escalation of the 17-month-old war following the suspension of peace talks between Yemeni rebels and the internationally recognised government.

King Salman "has ordered paying a month's salary to active participants at the front lines" of the Yemen operation, which began in March last year, the Saudi Press Agency reported late Sunday.

"The order covers employees of the ministries of interior, defence, and the National Guard," it said, without giving the total cost of the bonus.

It comes as the kingdom battles a projected $87 billion deficit in 2016 after oil revenues collapsed by more than half over the past two years.

In April, Saudi Arabia announced its wide-ranging Vision 2030 plan to diversify the oil-dependent economy.

Dozens of Saudi troops have died along the border or on the Yemeni battlefield since the kingdom launched coalition operations there.

Border Guards Corporal Mishari al-Shahrani on Monday morning became the latest Saudi casualty, the Interior Ministry said.

On the front line in Saudi Arabia's Asir border zone, he was killed during an exchange of fire with Houthis shooting from Yemen, the ministry said.

The Saudi-led coalition acted in support of Yemen's government against Houthi rebels and their allies who overran much of the country.

Coalition jets struck targets around Yemen's rebel-held capital Sanaa for the first time in three months last week.

The raids came after increased ceasefire violations by the rebels and suspension of the United Nations-brokered talks in Kuwait, the coalition said.

In late July, 12 Saudi soldiers were killed in border clashes during the most serious fighting in months along the frontier.

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