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On Tuesday midnight Saudi Arabia continued its war crimes in Yemen by bombarding the Noor Center for Care and Rehabilitation of the blind.

Also struck by the Saudi-led coalition on Tuesday were the capital's Chamber of Commerce and Industry, and an empty wedding hall. No causalities were reported in neither strikes.

According to locals, the bomb hit the third floor of the Noor Center for the Blind in Sanaa around 1:30 am.

No deaths were reported, however three people are believed to have been wounded, according to Saba news agency.

The center’s deputy manager, Mohammed Daylami, exclaimed about the Saudis“having no clue about the rules and ethics of war.", reported Reuters.

"What did the disabled children do to do deserve being hit by an air strike? Where are the NGOs? Where is the UN?"Daylami told Saba news agency.

Another local, Abdullah Ahmed Banyan, who is a patient at the Noor Center was also reported condemning the strike, saying, to the International Business Times:

“Can you imagine they are striking the blind? What is this criminality? Why? Is it the blind that are fighting the war?"

The Noor Center is a one-of-a-kind center in Yemen. It is funded by the Yemeni Social Fund Development, one of the World Bank’s projects in the country.

United Nations official Rupert Colville confirmed the Saudi-led coalition strike on the rehabilitation center for the blind to Vice News.

Furthermore, on the same morning, the UN office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights presented updated figures on the number of casualties in the Saudi-led war on Yemen since last March.

Since last March, it confirmed, there has been 2,795 civilian deaths in Yemen, 5,324 people wounded, approximately 1 million people internally displaced because of the Saudi naval blockade, and as many as 20 million people in desperate need of food, water, and medical supplies.

The Middle East Eye reports that around 80 percent of Yemen's population are thought to currently be in need of aid.

Joe Strok, Human Rights Watch deputy Middle East director exclaimed saying,

“How many civilians will die in unlawful air strikes in Yemen before the coalition and its US ally investigate what went wrong and who is responsible."

Colville in his turn added that the UN had received "alarming information on the alleged use of cluster bombs by coalition forces" in Hajjah Governorate.

"During a field visit to the village of Al-Odair, in Haradh District, an OHCHR team found remnants of 29 cluster submunitions near banana plantations," said Colville. "According to witnesses, several other villages in the same area have been affected." reports Vice News.

The use of cluster bombs is prohibited in a 2008 treaty signed by 117 nations around the world. Saudi Arabia and the United States, however, are not parties to the treaty. The Human Rights Watchpresented evidence last year that Saudi Arabia has used U.S.-supplied cluster bombs in its war on Yemen. Back then the Saudi government denied using the cluster bombs on illegitimate targets.

In 2015 Saudi Arabia purchased 22,000 bombs in a $1.2 billion U.S. State Department-approveddeal. The United Arab Emirates, another coalition member, also purchased bombs from the United States.

Despite the supply of these massive amounts of bombs, the running of a command center responsible for providing the Saudis with "targeting assistance," and flying thousands of refueling missions for coalition aircraft, “the US does not consider itself a member of the Saudi-led alliance in Yemen.”

In December, the coalition also hit a Doctors Without Borders Hospital in Sanaa, with UN officials reporting the death of at least 62 Yemeni civilians by the coalition’s airstrikes only in that month.

"Supporters of the Saudi-led coalition, such as the US and UK, should pay attention to ours and OHCHR's findings that these weapons are killing and wounding civilians and should demand an immediate stop to the use of these nasty weapons," said Ole Solvang, Deputy Emergencies Director at Human Rights Watch, to Vice News.

The Saudi-led coalition’s highly inhumane conducts in the war on Yemen, such as its continued random bombardment of civilian targets, has been widely criticized and condemned by human rights organizations.

The independent’s Yemen researcher Belkis Wille, reports to The Independent saying “We have seen the coalition bombing and hitting dozens of civilian objects including homes, hospitals and schools, killing hundreds of civilians.”

On January 2nd, Saudi Arabia announced that the cease fire which began on December 15th as a result of the UN-backed peace talks had ended. On the same day, it had committed a mass execution of 47 people, one of which was a prominent Shia Cleric. This was followed by a worldwide outcry deeming the preposterous execution of the Shia Cleric Sheykh Nimer Baqer al-Nimer unjust and insane.

Since then, there has been a dangerous rise in inimical political stances regionally. In Iran, the people expressed their condemnation of the cleric’s execution by attacking the Saudi embassy in Tehran and setting it on fire. Despite the Iranian government’s denunciation of the attack, and its arresting of a number of people responsible for the attack, Saudi Arabia declared cutting off ties with the Islamic Republic of Iran. A number of other countries in the region,consequently, followed the Saudi government’s steps by either cutting off ties with Iran, asking Iranian diplomats to leave their countries, or at least calling upon them to condemn the spontaneous popular Iranian behavior.