Agencies/Sanaa

Saudi-backed loyalist forces in Yemen pressed an offensive against Shia Houthi rebels yesterday, the second day of a major campaign aimed at retaking the capital a year after its fall.
Fighters loyal to exiled President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi launched their much anticipated attack against the Iranian-backed rebels and their allies in the key province of Marib.   The escalation comes as the exiled government backed out of a proposed new round of UN-brokered peace talks, insisting that rebels should withdraw from captured territory.
Oil-rich Marib lies east of Sanaa and has been the scene of heavy clashes between the northern-based rebels and powerful tribes allied with Hadi.  
“The aim is to cut the supply routes of the Houthis,” a military official said.
Out of their Al Aber base in nearby Hadramout province, government troops have moved towards four rebel footholds in northwest Marib, on the route to Sanaa.
Rebel-controlled Saba news agency said the forces had been repelled in Jufeinah and Thatt-Alra, in Marib, with the coalition suffering “heavy losses”.
At a landing zone in Safer camp, in Marib, an AFP correspondent reported fully-armed coalition Apache helicopters taking off and returning, as a convoy of armoured vehicles and personnel carriers headed to the front.
Coalition forces have also deployed Patriot missile defence systems, Yemeni military sources said, following a September 4 missile attack on Safer that killed 67 coalition troops.
Gulf Arab troops from the Saudi-led coalition have joined the battle on the ground to evict rebels from Marib, while coalition warplanes have since March pounded insurgent positions across Yemen.
The United Arab Emirates said its troops were taking part in the latest operations and announced the death of one of its soldiers.
“Our forces have launched military operations in Marib, achieving progress on the ground and pushing back the Houthi militiamen, as part of operations conducted by the Arab coalition,” a UAE military official said late Sunday.
“During these operations, one of our soldiers has fallen martyr,” said the official, whose country lost 52 soldiers in the Safer missile strike and has vowed to avenge their deaths.
The coalition launched its air war in support of Hadi after the rebels advanced on the southern port city of Aden, where he had taken refuge after escaping house arrest in the capital, where the Houthis took control unopposed in September 2014.
Pro-Hadi fighters, backed by troops freshly trained and armed by Saudi Arabia, pushed the rebels out of Aden in July and have since recaptured four other southern provinces.
The military gains were made following months of fierce air strikes against positions of the Houthis and troops loyal to ousted president Ali Abdullah Saleh, who has sided with the rebels.
Air strikes yesterday were carried out mainly in support of the ground offensive in Marib, targeting Houthi strongholds in the southern part of the province.
More than 4,500 people, many of them civilians, have been killed in Yemen’s conflict since March, according to the World Health Organisation.
The UN envoy to Yemen will return to Saudi Arabia to meet members of the exiled government after it pulled out of the peace talks, the UN press office said yesterday.
Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed plans to head back to Riyadh for “further consultations with the government of Yemen, other Yemeni stakeholders and states in the region and address outstanding concerns”, the UN statement said.




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