
ADEN (AFP) -
Loyalist
forces pushed Al-Qaeda out of parts of Aden on Wednesday in a new drive
against the jihadists in Yemen's second city where the internationally
recognised government is based, military sources said.
Troops and
militia retook the central prison and deployed on main roads across the
Mansura residential district after a three-hour gunbattle with the
jihadists, the sources said.
There was no immediate word on casualties.
The
Sunni extremists of Al-Qaeda have exploited conflict between the
government and Shiite rebels who overran the capital Sanaa in September
2014 to expand their control in the south.
A Saudi-led coalition,
which intervened in support of President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi when he
fled into exile in March last year, concentrated its firepower on
pushing the rebels and their allies out of Aden and neighbouring
southern provinces, and the jihadists took advantage.
But in
recent days, the coalition has carried out a series of air strikes
against Al-Qaeda in cities it has seized including Hadramawt provincial
capital Mukalla and Abyan provincial capital Zinjibar.
Five
militants were killed and three wounded in Monday strikes on Mukalla, a
major port city that the jihadists seized last April, provincial
officials told AFP.
Zinjibar residents told AFP that Al-Qaeda
fighters were evacuating public buildings in the city on Tuesday in
apparent fear of new strikes.
The coalition raids follow a US
strike against an Al-Qaeda training camp outside Mukalla last week that
killed 71 militants, according to provincial officials.
On Tuesday, hundreds of people took part in an Al-Qaeda-organised protest in Mukalla against the US raid, witnesses said.
"US raids will not defeat jihad," banners carried by the demonstrators said.
But other residents resisted the jihadists' efforts to get them to join the protest, the witnesses said.
There
has been no let-up in the longstanding US air war against Al-Qaeda's
Yemen-based branch, which it regards as the jihadist network's most
dangerous.
US strikes have taken out a number of senior Al-Qaeda commanders in Yemen over the past year.
© 2016 AFP
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