Bangkok Post

14 dead as fight rages on in Abyan

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SANAA: Fourteen combatants died in Yemen on Saturday, as fighting between pro-government troops and separatist forces entered the sixth day in the southern province of Abyan, according to sources on both sides.

Separatist forces of the Southern Transition­al Council (STC) are resisting an offensive by pro-government troops launched on the outskirts of Zinjibar, some 60 kilometres from the main southern city of Aden.

“Fourteen fighters, including ten pro-government soldiers, were killed on Saturday,” a government military official said on condition of anonymity.

The toll was confirmed by a separatist military source, who also claimed the capture of “40 pro-government soldiers and the seizure of military equipment”.

“They (pro-government soldiers) were unable to advance toward Zinjibar and they will only get there over our dead bodies,” a separatist commander on the front line said.

The offensive was being carried out by the military wing of the Islamist party Al-Islah — allied to the government — according to several sources.

The fighting is the first major confrontat­ion since the separatist­s declared self-rule in southern Yemen on 26 April, accusing the government of failing to carry out its duties and of “conspiring” against their cause.

At least ten fighters were killed and many were wounded on both sides in fighting on Monday.

The clashes complicate Yemen’s war between the government — backed by a Saudi-led military coalition — and Iran-backed Houthi rebels who control the north, including the capital Sanaa.

The government and the STC have technicall­y been allies in the long war against the Houthis.

But the separatist­s in the south, which used to be an independen­t country, have agitated to break away again — a campaign that was temporaril­y put to rest with a power-sharing deal signed in Riyadh last November.

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