Yemen’s President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi holds a meeting with officials in the southern Yemeni city of Aden yesterday after he returned to ‘supervise’ a new military offensive against Houthi rebels.

AFP
Aden


Yemeni pro-government forces advancing into the strategic province of Taez were battling rebels on the outskirts of its second largest town, military sources said yesterday.
Eight rebels and two loyalists were killed in the fighting for Rahida, the pro-government sources said.
The town lies on the main road from government-held territory towards Taez, Yemen’s third largest city, 40km further north, where loyalist troops have been besieged by the rebels for months.
Loyalist forces were backed by significant reinforcements from a Saudi-led coalition which intervened in support of President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi in March. Hadi returned from Saudi exile on Tuesday as the offensive against the Houthi rebels and their allies got under way.
The coalition carried out at least 10 air strikes against rebel positions in and around Rahida during the night, the military sources said.
Breaking the siege of Taez is seen as crucial for the recapture of other central provinces and opening the way to the rebel-held capital Sanaa further north.
It is also important for securing the south, where loyalists have retaken five provinces from the rebels since July, including second city Aden, where Hadi has set up base.
In their advance out of the south, pro-government forces have also been battling the rebels in Marib province east of the capital.
Hundreds of reinforcements were deployed yesterday to the province, equipped with dozens of military vehicles newly arrived from neighbouring Saudi Arabia, military sources said.  Loyalists control Marib city, 140km from Sanaa, but they have so far failed to secure the rest of the province, which is the source of much of Yemen’s oil output.

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