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Yemeni troops kick al-Qaeda out of key provincial capital: Reports

Residents and UAE state news agency claims al-Qaeda fighters no longer in control of Ata, in Shabwa province
Fighters loyal to the exiled president, Abd Rabbuh Hadi (Reuters)
By Reuters

Yemeni troops and armour have pushed al-Qaeda militants out of main cities in Shabwa, residents said on Friday, regaining government control over the southern province for the first time in years.

They said al-Qaeda militants withdrew to the mountains without a fight as armoured vehicles from the government army and a new force known as the Elite Shabwa Forces rolled into the provincial capital Ataq, and other towns and cities from Thursday morning.

The UAE's state news agency, WAM, said on Thursday the advance had been backed by the US and the UAE, but it did not specify what support they had provided.

Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) has taken advantage of the civil war pitting the Saudi-backed government of President Abd Rabbuh Hadi against the Houthi movement to try to widen its control and influence in Yemen.

The Shabwa operation marked the first time in years that government-backed forces had controlled all districts in the province, where Yemen's biggest gas project, a $4.5bn Total-led plant, is based.

The terminal stopped operating after foreign experts were evacuated in 2015 but the government says it plans to get the facility working again.

Large-scale ground operations by regional troops have been rare since 2015, when al-Qaeda was driven out of the mini-state it had established in the port city of Mukalla, capital of neighbouring Hadramout province. But air strikes by U.S. drones and aircraft against the militant group are frequent.

The US military carried out an air strike in Shabwa in June that killed Abu Khattab al-Awlaqi, one of the emirs of AQAP, along with two other militants.

Operations against the militants are complicated by the civil war, in which the Saudi-led coalition is fighting Iran-backed Houthi fighters and troops loyal to the former dictator, Ali Abdullah Saleh, in a campaign to restore Hadi's internationally recognised government, now based in the southern port city of Aden. The forces are largely stalemated.

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