Saudi Arabia said late on Sunday that it intercepted an explosive-laden drone launched by Yemen’s Houthi rebels towards the kingdom's southern region. The kingdom leads a coalition fighting on behalf of Yemen’s government against the rebels who seized the capital, Sanaa, in 2014. A coalition statement, carried by the Saudi state news agency SPA, said the drone launched towards civilian targets. “Houthi militias are continuing to target civilians and civilian objects in Saudi Arabia. We will work to neutralise and destroy their capabilities in accordance with international humanitarian law,” it said. The coalition earlier intercepted and destroyed another explosive-laden drone over Yemeni airspace that the Houthis fired towards Saudi Arabia, according to SPA. Cross-border attacks by the Houthis have increased since late May, when a truce prompted by the coronavirus pandemic ended. Yemen’s Minister of Information, Muammar Al Eryani, said late on Sunday that the Yemeni army with the support of the coalition had foiled several attacks by the rebels over the previous two days. The army managed to track and destroy 23 Houthi drones in Sanaa and several cities in the south in August, he said. The deadliest attack conducted by the rebels was in June when they launched several missiles and drones at Saudi Arabia’s capital, Riyadh. The coalition said at the time that it shot down eight booby-trapped unmanned aircraft launched at civilian targets, as well as "three ballistic missiles from Saada governorate towards the kingdom". The United Kingdom and other countries have condemned the attacks on Saudi Arabia and urged the Houthis to prove they are serious about finding peace. The coalition intervened in Yemen's civil war in 2015 to restore the government of President Abdrabu Mansur Hadi. The fallout from the conflict has led the UN to classify Yemen as one of the world’s most desperate humanitarian disasters.