A Yemeni supporter of the separatist Southern Movement stands on a tank firing during clashes with Houthi rebels in the Mansura district of Aden.

AFP/Aden

Yemeni rebels made new gains in the battleground southern city Aden on Sunday as a Saudi-led coalition trying to halt their advance faced growing calls for a humanitarian pause in air strikes.

The Red Cross has appealed for an immediate truce to allow families to seek water, food and medical assistance, describing the situation as "dire".

Russia presented a draft resolution to the UN Security Council on Saturday calling for a humanitarian pause in the Saudi-led air war against the Houthi Shia rebels, now in its 11th day.

The coalition kept up its night-time raids against rebel positions and arms depots, particularly around the capital Sanaa and Saada, the northern stronghold of the Iran-backed rebels.

In the main southern city Aden, the rebels advanced into the central district of Mualla, capturing the provincial government headquarters, a local official said.

They bombarded residential areas, setting fire to several buildings and damaging others, witnesses said.

At least five civilians were killed and 14 wounded in the latest clashes, according to the city's health department director Al-Kheder Lassouar.

"There are children among the wounded," he said.

Residents said dozens of families had fled their homes in the port city, the heart of which sits on an extinct volcano jutting out into the sea.

The rebel forces advanced to near the port of Mualla, which is defended by militiamen of "popular committees" loyal to President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi, who has fled to neighbouring Saudi Arabia.

Snipers on rooftops  

"Snipers, who took position on the roofs of provincial government buildings, targeted passers-by and members of the popular committees," pro-Hadi fighter Khalid Bashaea told AFP.

The rebels also fired mortar rounds at an Aden television station loyal to Hadi, forcing it off the air.

Hospitals treating the wounded are running short of medicines and the streets of Aden are strewn with bodies, the Red Cross said, calling for a 24-hour ceasefire.

"Our relief supplies and surgical personnel must be allowed to enter the country and safely reach the worst-affected places to provide help," said Robert Mardin, head of Middle East operations for the International Committee of the Red Cross.

"Otherwise, put starkly, many more people will die. For the wounded, their chances of survival depend on action within hours, not days."

The Saudi-led military coalition, which comprises four other Gulf states as well as Egypt, Jordan, Morocco and Sudan, said aid would be allowed into the country when conditions are right.

Violence has escalated sharply in the deeply tribal country on the southern tip of the Arabian Peninsula since the coalition launched Operation Decisive Storm against the rebels on March 26.

Hadi took refuge in Aden in February after the Huthis seized power in the capital Sanaa, but left for Saudi Arabia last month as they advanced on the city.

The rebels seized his presidential palace in Aden on Thursday but, aided by air strikes and arms drops, Hadi loyalists drove the rebels out of the hilltop complex the following day.

Regional power struggle  

There were also clashes on Sunday in the rebel-held southern town of Loder, in Abyan province, where 24 people, including 21 Shia militiamen, were reported killed.

The violence has raised fears that impoverished Yemen could be torn apart by a proxy war between Saudi Arabia and Iran.

Iranian media reported on Sunday that Tehran had sought help from Oman, which unlike other Gulf states did not participate in the Saudi-led coalition, to end the air strikes "immediately".

Oman, which is separated from Iran by only the narrow Strait of Hormuz, enjoys much better ties with the Islamic republic than other Gulf states.

Russia's request to halt the air strikes came as Gulf countries were pushing for a separate UN resolution that would impose an arms embargo and sanctions on the Houthis.

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