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Yemen fighters backing exiled government take southern city
By AP - May 26,2015 - Last updated at May 26,2015
People injured by a mortar shell blast during clashes between Houthis and fighters of the Popular Resistance Committees are rushed to a hospital in Yemen’s southwestern city of Taiz on Tuesday (Reuters photo)
SANAA — Fighters backing Yemen's exiled government captured a city on the road to the port city of Aden, officials said Tuesday, their first significant victory since a Saudi-led coalition began targeting Shiite rebels in air strikes.
The fighters took Dhale, a significant gain as the city is home to the command centre of the 33rd Armoured Brigade, the country's largest army unit that had been loyal to former Yemeni leader Ali Abdullah Saleh. Saleh has backed the Shiite rebels, known as Houthis, in their campaign across Yemen that began in September.
Government-allied fighters seized tanks, rocket launchers and ammunition caches from the base at Dhale, some 120 kilometres from Aden, said the officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to talk to journalists.
Footage from Dhale aired on the Saudi-funded Al Arabiya satellite news network showed fighters in one armoured vehicle flying the flag of once-independent South Yemen. The fighters, though allied with exiled President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi, also want an independent southern state in the country, which only was unified in 1990.
Dozens of fighters on both sides have been killed in intense clashes around Dhale in the past two weeks. Fighting between the two sides still raged Tuesday on the city's outskirts, officials said.
A Saudi-led coalition began targeting the Houthis and their allies March 26. The UN estimates that at least 1,037 civilians, including 130 women and 234 children, have been killed between March 26 and May 20 in the fighting.
Hadi's government in exile has declared several provinces of Yemen disaster zones, including Dhale, where all basic services have collapsed. Due to the violence and a Saudi-led sea-and-air blockade, most Yemenis face severe shortages of fuel, water, medicine and food.
In a new report, international humanitarian group Oxfam warned that some 16 million people in Yemen don't have access to clean water.
"This is equivalent to the populations of Berlin, London, Paris and Rome combined, all rotting under heaps of garbage in the streets, broken sewage pipes and without clean water for the seventh-consecutive week," said Grace Ommer of Oxfam.
The Saudi-led coalition carried out airstrikes Tuesday in at least five cities, including the capital, Sanaa, and Aden, a rebel stronghold.
Meanwhile, a statement by the Saudi interior ministry said fighting along the kingdom’s border with Yemen near Asir killed one Saudi soldier and wounded three late Monday.
As fighting continues, hopes are dwindling for a political resolution to end the war. Peace efforts also received a major blow this week after UN-sponsored negotiations due to take place in Geneva were indefinitely postponed.
And in a limited Cabinet reshuffle, Hadi appointed a former lawmaker, Brig. Gen. Abdu Al Houzifi, as a new interior minister to replace one who sided with the Houthis.
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Shiite rebels freed more than 300 prisoners in the southern city of Dhale, Yemeni security officials said, as the rebels fought pitched battles with supporters of the country's beleaguered President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi in the southern port city of Aden.
Saudi-led air strikes targeting Yemen's Shiite rebels resumed on Monday and fierce clashes were underway across the impoverished country after a five-day truce expired, as one-sided talks boycotted by the rebels offered little hope of ending the conflict.
Yemen's exiled government on Monday declared three areas in the country engulfed in fighting between Shiite rebels, their allies and pro-government forces as "disaster" zones, including the southern port city of Aden, and said that the month of violence has claimed 1,000 civilian lives.