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Saudi-led coalition airstrikes killed Yemeni Judge Yahya Rubaid in his home on Monday morning, two Yemeni Defense Ministry officials said and a Houthi Defense Ministry official confirmed to CNN.

Yemeni citizen and resident of the capital city Sana'a, Marwan spoke to AH Tribune about the strike. “Viewers said that the bodies flew to the street from the strike force,” Marwan said, declining to give his last name for security reasons.

Judge Rubaid--who was killed along with his wife, son, daughter-in-law and three grandchildren--is known for once prosecuting Yemeni President Abdu Rabu Mansour Hadi for treason. Hadi resigned a little over a year ago and was exiled to Aden, then Riyadh, under protection of Saudi Arabia.

The late judge also prosecuted cases against militant groups like Al-Qaeda and other now ousted Houthi opponents.

A Saudi spokesman denied claims that the airstrike--or any Saudi-led airstrikes--deliberately target civilians.

"We do not target homes. We are looking for Scud missiles. We always confirm, we do not attack residential sites. We attack storage," Brig. Gen. Ahmed Asseri told CNN by telephone.

That said, the Saudi-coalition has developed a pattern of attacking residential neighborhoods and civilian infrastructure. Countless panels and reports have found widespread and possible warcrime evidence of Saudi targeting of civilians.

The Houthis took control of Yemen’s capitol city in September 2014 in just a few days, after capturing the building of state-run Yemen TV, the offices of the prime minster and the military headquarters. Yemen had been going through a protracted political crisis since the 2011 Yemeni uprising (Intifada) and revolution.

Marwan, who has now lived in the Houthi-controlled city of Sana'a for two years, is no stranger to the Saudi-coalition airstrikes which began in March 2015.

On Tuesday morning, the day after the most recent airstrikes, Marwan said that the explosion “got close to my house,” adding “I am okay, but I don’t know about them.”

Airstrikes carried out by the Persian Gulf Kingdom have been nearly indiscriminate, targeting Medicins Sans Frontiers facilities and hospitals; schools like the Science and Faith School in Beni Hushayash, Sana’a and the Kheir School in the village of Hadhran; and a recently leaked investigation by a UN panel of experts found that the Saudi-led airstrikes have targeted civilians in a “widespread and systematic” manner.

The report criticizes tactics by the Saudi-allied forces, the Houthi forces and government-aligned resistance fighters.

Citing “an increase in child recruitment, the blockade of commercial goods entering the country and the siege of Taiz,” the report claims such tactics “have limited not only the ability of hospitals and humanitarian actors to operate and respond to the situation, but also the ability of people to be able to sustain themselves.”

Since its inception, the fighting has displaced over 2 million people and created an enormous humanitarian crisis with nearly 80 percent of the country’s population facing food shortages.

The conflict has thus far claimed the lives of over 5,800 people.

Just two days before the most recent airstrike in Sana'a, United States Secretary of State John Kerry reinvigorated U.S. support for Saudi’s campaign in Yemen.

Speaking at the Royal Air Base in Saudi Arabia’s capitol city of Riyadh, Kerry said, “In Yemen, we face the Houthi insurgency and the ongoing threat that is posed by al-Qaeda, threats to the territorial integrity of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.”

“We have made it clear that we stand with our friends in Saudi Arabia,” Kerry added.

The U.S. has provided intelligence as well as the sale of weapons totaling $1.29 billion to the Kingdom, and refuses to condemn human rights abuses, despite a litany of proven offenses.

Saudi justifies its intense airstrikes by stating that the Houthi movement is backed by Iran, Saudi’s enemy to the north. The Houthi leadership denies these claims, asserting instead that it is a movement seeking Yemeni independence.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon has repeatedly called for convening a new round of peace talks in Yemen, most recently on 8 January after the Yemeni government expelled the UN human rights representative for being “impartial” in assessing the country’s situation.

But primary among the U.N.’s concerns is the mounting evidence of Saudi war crimes. A statement issued by Mr. Ban’s spokesperson alleges that he “has received troubling reports of the use of cluster munitions in attacks on Sana’a on 6 January in several locations. The use of cluster munitions in populated areas may amount to a war crime due to their indiscriminate nature.”

Meanwhile life proceeds for residents of Sana’a. In his conversation with AH Tribune, Marwan insisted that Saudi airstrikes are so common, “I returned from a picnic to take pictures.”

After our conversation, Marwan joined back with his family and finished the picnic.