Yemeni loyalist forces said they advanced Monday into the last district of the southern port city of Aden still held by Iran-backed rebels, seeking to flush out the remaining insurgents. Fighters from the pro-government Popular Resistance "have regained control of most of Al-Tawahi district," including the presidential residence, said spokesman Ali al-Ahmadi.
The southern fighters also pushed the Shia Houthi rebels and allied forces loyal to former president Ali Abdullah Saleh out of the region's military headquarters and the naval base, he told AFP. "A wide combing operation is under way to flush out" rebel holdouts, he said, adding that remaining insurgents had taken positions on several rooftops.
At least 17 rebels and 11 pro-government fighters have been killed in clashes since Sunday, military sources said. Ahmadi said 40 other rebels have been taken prisoner, but Al-Maashiq presidential palace in the downtown district of Crater remains in rebel hands. Loyalist forces backed by Saudi-led warplanes have regained control of most of Aden since an assault dubbed "Operation Golden Arrow" began last Tuesday.
Clashes have rumbled on, however, despite the government's declaration on Friday of the city's "liberation" after four months of ferocious fighting. Rebel bombardment on Sunday killed 57 civilians in the Dar Saad neighbourhood in the north of the port city, according to local health chief Al-Khader Laswar. Two ministers from the government in exile in Saudi Arabia returned to Aden at the weekend, touring the devastated city. Transport Minister Badr Basalmeh told journalists in the city that a technical team had arrived from the United Arab Emirates to repair the control tower and passenger terminal at Aden international airport, which was heavily damaged in clashes before rebel forces were driven out.
Elsewhere in southern Yemen, Saudi-led coalition warplanes on Monday carried out several raids on rebel positions, especially Al-Anad air base in Lahj and the neighbouring province of Dhaleh, military sources said. The Arab coalition launched an air campaign against the rebels in March after President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi was forced to flee to Riyadh. More than 3,200 people have been killed in the fighting - many of them civilians, the UN says.