Aden: Two UN aid ships docked in Yemen’s devastated port city of Aden Tuesday bringing desperately needed relief supplies after four months of fierce fighting between rebels and loyalist fighters.

The humanitarian aid arrived as forces loyal to exiled President Abd Rabbo Mansour Hadi pressed on with operations to tighten their control over the southern city.

“This is the first boat carrying the UN flag to dock in Aden since the war began” in late March, provincial Governor Nayef Al Bakri told reporters at the port before a second vessel also docked.

Transport Minister Badr Basalmeh said the two consignments sent by the UAE amounted to 7,000 tonnes of food and pharmaceutical aid.

The UN’s World Food Programme (WFP), which chartered the ships, had tried repeatedly in past weeks to deliver aid to the port city but failed because of security concerns.

Vessels sent by the UAE managed to reach Aden in May but not under the UN flag.

A humanitarian ceasefire declared by the United Nations earlier this month failed to take hold. The WFP had described the truce as the “final hope” to deliver desperately needed aid.

The WFP had delivered aid ahead of the truce to the rebel-controlled Hodeida port in western Yemen, but the insurgents did not allow an aid convoy to travel to Aden.

The United Nations had warned then that the impoverished country was just “one step away from famine.”

More than 21.1 million people - over 80 per cent of Yemen’s population - need aid, with 13 million facing food shortages.

Transport Minister Badr Basalmeh told journalists Monday that a UAE technical team had arrived to repair the control tower and passenger terminal at Aden international airport, heavily damaged in clashes before rebel forces were driven out