Houthis driven from Aden palace
SAUDI-LED air raids drove Yemeni rebels from the presidential palace in the main southern city of Aden yesterday as the UN reported more than 500 dead in two weeks of fighting.
The impoverished Arabian Peninsula state has sunk further into chaos since the Saudi-led coalition launched Operation Decisive Storm on March 26 to try to halt the rebel advance.
The turmoil has raised fears that al-Qaida will expand its foothold in the deeply tribal country, which borders oil-rich Saudi Arabia and lies near key shipping routes.
A day after al-Qaida militants stormed a jail and freed 300 inmates, residents said the Sunni extremists had overrun large parts of Mukalla, the capital of the southeastern province of Hadramawt.
UN aid chief Valerie Amos said on Thursday that 519 people had been killed and nearly 1,700 injured in two weeks of fighting in Yemen, adding she was “extremely concerned” for the safety of trapped civilians.
The conflict has sent tensions soaring between Iran and Saudi Arabia, the foremost Shiite and Sunni Muslim powers in the Middle East.
Iran has angrily rejected accusations it has armed the Houthi Shiite rebels, who have allied with military units loyal to former president Ali Abdullah Saleh to seize large parts of Yemen including the capital Sanaa.
The airs trikes failed to stop the rebel forces battling their way into Aden, the last bastion of supporters of President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi, who has fled to Saudi Arabia.
On Thursday, in a highly symbolic victory, they captured Hadi’s Aden palace. But after a night of intense bombardment by the coalition, rebel forces quit the hilltop complex early Friday, according to a senior official.
“The Houthi militia and their allies withdrew before dawn from the Al-Maashiq palace,” said the official in Aden, who did not want to be named.
A security source and the official Saudi news agency SPA also reported the anti-Hadi fighters had left the palace.
The rebel forces retreated to the nearby central district of Khor Maksar, where 12 rebels were killed in an overnight attack by pro-Hadi militiamen, a military source said.
The coalition said late Thursday that the situation in Aden was “stable”.
“Houthi militias are not in control of any government buildings in Aden,” said spokesman Brigadier General Ahmed Assiri.
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