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Yemeni president's forces seize Aden airport

ADEN, March 19, 2015

Supporters of Yemeni President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi seized Aden's international airport on Thursday after battles with rival forces that left at least six people dead, a local official and medics said.

Hadi's troops deployed tanks and armoured vehicles in this southern port city against heavily armed
special forces loyal to former President Ali Abdullah Saleh, an ally of the Houthi movement that
controls northern Yemen.

The rise to power of the Iran-backed Houthis since September last year has deepened divisions in
Yemen's complex web of political and religious allegiances, split the army and left the country increasingly cut off from the outside world.

The fighting around a special forces base in the Khor Maksar district of Aden spread to residential
districts and prompted roads to the nearby airport to be closed.

Airport authorities cancelled at least one flight after shooting started early in the morning, where
members of the so-called Popular Committees, a local militia loyal to Hadi, was in a standoff with
the special forces loyal to Saleh.

A local official said the militiamen, backed by regular troops deployed from a nearby army camp that
had sided with Hadi, secured control of the airport by midday.

A local security official and medics said four special forces soldiers and two militiamen died in the
clashes. There were a number of injuries, but no exact figures were immediately available.

Residents in Crater and al-Ma'asheeq district, which are considered the heart Aden's commercial
district, said Popular Committee fighters had been seen taking up positions, but there were no
reports of fighting there.

POWER STRUGGLE

The growing instability in Aden has overshadowed a vigorous campaign of attacks by Al Qaeda, long
seen by Washington as the main threat to the country, which shares a long border with the world's
top oil exporter, Saudi Arabia.

The Sunni Muslim Islamist group late last year began shifting the focus of its fight onto the Houthis,
whom it sees as heretics, after the Shi'ite Muslim movement captured territory beyond the Yemen
capital Sanaa.

Tensions have been heightened in Aden since Hadi fled there in February after escaping a month of
house arrest in Sanaa by Houthi forces who seized Sanaa last September.

Hadi has been trying to consolidate his control over Aden, sacking of the commander of the city's
garrison, General Abdel-Hafez al-Saqqaf, and replacing him with one of his officers. Saqqaf,
however, has refused to hand over command of the force, estimated at between 1,500-2,000 troops. - Reuters




Tags: yemen | Troops | airport |

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