Washington warned on Thursday it would not stand by while Tehran supports Shiite rebels in Yemen, as Iran's supreme leader denounced Saudi-led air strikes in the country as "criminal acts".
In the most direct American criticism yet of Tehran's backing for the Shiite Huthi rebels, Secretary of State John Kerry said Washington would not accept foreign interference in Yemen.
"There have been -- there are, obviously -- flights coming from Iran. Every single week there are flights from Iran and we've traced it and know this," he told PBS television.
Washington has backed the Saudi-led air campaign which began last month as the rebels advanced on Yemen's main southern city of Aden after seizing Sanaa.
"This move is not acceptable in the region and I would warn that they must stop these criminal acts in Yemen," he said on his website.
"The last thing the region and our world need is more of the chaos and crimes we have seen in Libya and Syria," Ban said ahead of a weekend trip to Qatar.
President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi fled Aden for Saudi Arabia during the Huthi advance and the city has since seen heavy clashes.
Riyadh has accused Tehran, the major Shiite power, of backing the rebels in a bid to establish a pro-Iran state on its doorstep.
The UN children's agency warned that around 30 percent of fighters in Yemen's armed groups were minors.
"We are seeing children in battle, at checkpoints and unfortunately among (those) killed and injured," Julien Harneis, UNICEF's representative in Yemen, told AFP in Geneva.
Kerry, after world powers agreed a framework deal with Iran on its nuclear programme, said Washington was not looking for confrontation.
"But we're not going to step away from our alliances and our friendships and the need to stand with those who feel threatened as a consequence of the choices that Iran might be making."
On Thursday, witnesses heard three explosions as coalition aircraft attacked the defence ministry in Sanaa.
Three bases of the Republican Guards, loyal to Huthi ally and former strongman Ali Abdullah Saleh were also hit.
Coalition spokesman Brigadier-General Ahmed al-Assiri told reporters in Riyadh that air strikes sought to sever Huthi communications between Sanaa and Aden.
He also accused the rebels and pro-Saleh forces of stockpiling weapons in built-up areas and said rebels were hiding in residential parts of Aden.
Overnight air strikes killed at least 14 rebels near Aden's northern edge, a source in pro-government forces told AFP.
Aid trickling in
An official in Aden said air strikes also hit a camp in Shabwa province held by the Huthis' main allies, forces who have remained loyal to Saleh who was ousted in 2012 after an Arab Spring-inspired uprising.
Since Saleh's ouster, Hadi has been unable to assert government authority in a deeply divided tribal country.
As well as the Huthis, from north Yemen, the government has struggled against Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) -- considered the most dangerous branch of the jihadist network.
Yemen for years allowed Washington to wage a drone war against AQAP, but US forces pulled out amid the latest unrest.
Concern has been growing for what aid workers say is a mounting humanitarian crisis.
Some aid trickled into Aden by ship on Wednesday but International Committee of the Red Cross efforts to organise cargo flights into Sanaa have so far failed.
In Aden, witnesses have said the situation is dire, with bodies lying in the streets.
Diplomatic efforts have increased, with the Iranian and Pakistani foreign ministers pledging at talks in Islamabad on Wednesday to work towards finding a negotiated solution.
Zarif laid out a four-stage plan for talks, calling for an immediate ceasefire followed by humanitarian assistance, dialogue among Yemenis and creation of an "all-inclusive government".
Meanwhile rights groups announced on Thursday that dozens of American citizens stuck in Yemen are suing the United States in a bid to get it to evacuate them.
Three US-based rights organisations said 41 plaintiffs were bringing the suit against Kerry and Defense Secretary Ashton Carter, demanding action for citizens whose "lives are in danger from ongoing military action and violent attacks."
The United States this week acknowledged it has no immediate plans to rescue any stranded nationals in Yemen.
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