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Friday April 26, 2024

Yemen to merge ‘fighters’ with army

Fierce fighting rages in South Yemen

By our correspondents
July 30, 2015
ADEN: The exiled Yemeni government has issued an order for militiamen fighting alongside loyalist troops against rebels be merged into the armed forces, as clashes raged Wednesday in the country’s south.
The supreme defence council, which met in Riyadh on Tuesday, decided to “assimilate members of the Popular Resistance into the units of the armed forces and security forces,” the government-run news agency said.
The meeting, headed by President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi, took the decision to reward them for their “brave contribution to defending the homeland.”
Popular Resistance units were formed when the Iran-backed rebels and their allies advanced on southern regions after they had overran the capital in September.
Meanwhile, clashes raged in the south, where pro-government forces expanded their area of control after recapturing the port of Aden, Yemen’s second city, after four months of fighting.
The loyalists pushed back rebels in Lahoum, on Aden’s northern outskirts, following heavy fighting in which 12 rebels were killed, military sources said.
Three pro-Hadi fighters were killed and dozens wounded, medical sources said.
The area lies on the road to Lahj, where loyalists have been tightening the noose on rebels, with the aim of recapturing the strategic Al-Anad airbase.
The clashes further evidenced the failure to take hold of a five-day truce declared from midnight on Sunday by the Saudi-led, pro-government Arab coalition to allow the delivery of desperately needed relief supplies.
Four months of fighting has left 3,984 people dead, nearly half of them civilians, according to the United Nations.
In a related development, a Saudi lawman was killed and two others were wounded during an attack in area of Eastern Province, the interior ministry said on Wednesday.
“One policeman was killed and two injured,” an interior ministry spokesman said.
In a statement, police said two suspects were arrested after the patrol came under fire in al-Jesh village of Qatif district late on Tuesday.
“The motive of the crime is not clear yet, and we are waiting for the investigation results,” the spokesman said.
Two residents of the area told AFP that similar incidents have been linked to criminal activity including the drug trade.
Eastern Province was also the scene of periodic clashes involving security forces after demonstrations broke out four years ago alongside a protest movement in neighbouring Bahrain.