Gulf News

1,200 inmates escape from Yemen jail

AL HOUTHIS POUND LOYALIST-HELD AREA IN ADEN, KILL 31 CIVILIANS

- — AFP

In Taiz, Yemen’s third biggest city, forces loyal to exiled president Abd Rabbo Mansour Hadi were searching for 1,200 inmates, including Al Qaida members, who made a mass breakout as the prison was captured from Al Houthi forces.

A loyalist source accused the militiamen of deliberate­ly throwing open the gates in an apparent attempt to cover their withdrawal. “Between five and eight Al Qaida members were among the prisoners,” a military source said.

There have been repeated jailbreaks in Yemen since Al Houthi militiamen launched an offensive last summer, overrunnin­g the capital and then much of the rest of the country.

Al Qaida’s Yemen arm took advantage of the rebellion to seize the southeaste­rn port city of Al Mukalla in April where it freed more than 300 inmates, including one of its leaders.

Residentia­l area hit

Al Houthi fire on a residentia­l district of Yemen’s second city Aden killed at least 31 civilians yesterday as loyalist forces in central city Taez launched a manhunt for 1,200 escaped prisoners.

Both cities have seen heavy fighting as Hadi loyalists battle to fight back Al Houthi militiamen with the support of a Saudi-led bombing campaign launched in March.

Aden was Hadi’s last refuge before he fled into exile in neighbouri­ng Saudi Arabia in March and his loyalists have been battling to defend it against the militiamen and renegade troops.

Al Houthis and their allies pounded the loyalist-held Al Mansoura district with 15 Katyusha rockets, loyalist forces spokesman Ali Al Ahmadi said. The rocket fire began before dawn when the streets were busy ahead of the daytime fast observed by Muslims during Ramadan, Ahmadi said.

A fresh salvo of rockets later in the morning hit mourners burying some of the dead from the earlier fire, the spokesman and witnesses said. Medics said 41 people were also wounded, many of them seriously.

During the night, militia positions in the nearby neighbourh­oods of Dar Saad and Khor Maksar had been hit by a series of Saudi-led air strikes, residents said. A coalition strike in neighbouri­ng Lahj province killed 13 militiamen, a local official said.

On Monday, UN chief Ban Ki-moon called for an investigat­ion after air strikes hit the UN Developmen­t Programme compound in Aden, wounding a guard and causing serious damage.

Al Houthi militiamen deliberate­ly left the gates of the prison open when they were driven out by forces loyal to exiled President Abd Rabbo Mansour Hadi

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