A girl yesterday receives polio vaccine drops at a school in Sanaa sheltering people after conflict forced them to flee their homes in the Houthi-controlled northern province of Saada.
AFP
Aden
Forces loyal to Yemen’s government retook a fifth southern province yesterday, extending recent gains against Iran-backed Shia rebels who still control the capital.
The forces backing exiled President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi have been aided by troops and materiel from Yemen’s Gulf neighbours, as Saudi-led coalition warplanes pound rebel positions.
The rebels handed over Shabwa to government forces and withdrew after being promised a safe route out of the province, a military official said.
Other sources confirmed the pullout.
“The province was handed over” to the Southern Movement, a secessionist group whose militants have been fighting in loyalist ranks, said Salem al-Awlaqi, a political activist in Shabwa.
Officials said the pro-rebel governor of Shabwa, which has substantial oil reserves, had fled as loyalists prepared to enter the province.
They also accused the rebels of booby-trapping government buildings before fleeing, as they had done in other provinces.
As the rebels began entering neighbouring Baida province, Saudi-led coalition warplanes hit their convoys, destroying 13 military vehicles and leaving dead and wounded, military officials said.
Loyalist forces in the south launched an offensive last month against the rebels, forcing them out of main southern city Aden.
They subsequently retook Daleh, Lahj and Abyan provinces.
The advance is heading towards third city Taez, southwest of Sanaa, which analysts regard as the gateway to the capital which was overrun by the rebels in September.
After seizing Sanaa unopposed, the Houthis advanced on Aden in March, prompting intervention from the coalition aimed at restoring Hadi to power.
Renegade troops loyal to former president Ali Abdullah Saleh have joined the Houthis.
On the other side, the southern secessionists teamed up with pro-government troops as well as local Sunni tribes to form what they have dubbed Popular Resistance Committees.
Analysts say the sweeping victories in the south are a result of the rebels pulling their forces back to Taez, where residents reported ongoing clashes.
On Friday, loyalists retook several facilities from rebels in Taez, including police and civil defence headquarters, the government’s Sabanew.net website reported.
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