Dozens killed in anti-Houthi rebel offensive in Yemen

Dozens killed in anti-Houthi rebel offensive in Yemen
A Yemeni government offensive to capture the rebel enclave of Shabwa province has left at least 28 Houthi insurgents and 12 Yemeni soldiers dead, military officials have said.
2 min read
28 December, 2016
Government forces are pushing to capture the Houthi rebel enclave of Shabwa [AFP]

At least 28 Houthi insurgents and 12 Yemeni soldiers were killed on Tuesday in the southern province of Shabwa as government forces pushed to capture a rebel enclave, military officials said.

The fighting flared when forces loyal to President Abd Rabbo Mansour Hadi attacked rebels in Bayhan district, on the border between Shabwa and Marib provinces.

Bayhan is the only part of Shabwa province still controlled by the Iran-backed rebels after government forces supported by the Saudi-led Arab coalition last year expelled them from five southern provinces.

"The death toll of the Houthis has reached 28 while 12 soldiers of the legitimate forces were killed," a military official said.

Military officials said government forces backed by coalition war planes drove the rebels out of several positions in the area, adding that 14 insurgents were also captured.

The Yemen conflict has killed some 7,000 people since the Saudi-led intervention in March 2015, according to the United Nations.

The coalition began the military campaign against the rebels after they closed in on Hadi in his refuge in the southern city of Aden, forcing him to flee to Riyadh.

The rebels and allied renegade troops loyal to former President Ali Abdullah Saleh continue to control the capital Sanaa - which they overran in September 2014 - along with several mainly northern regions.

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