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Forces loyal to Yemeni President Abd Rabbo Mansour Hadi flash the victory sign on a road leading to Abyan province as they take part in the assault on Al Qaida in the southern provincial capital. Image Credit: AFP

Aden: A bomb-laden vehicle exploded on Sunday killing seven soldiers in Yemen’s south, where government forces backed by air power from an Arab coalition have launched an offensive against Al Qaida, military sources said.

The attack, which also wounded another 14 soldiers, targeted an army convoy as it entered the terrorist stronghold of Zinjibar, capital of Abyan province, said the sources, blaming Al Qaida for the bombing.

Forces loyal to President Abd Rabbo Mansour Hadi launched the Zinjibar offensive on Saturday, after similar assaults pushed out the terrorists from other areas in the south.

The Saudi-led coalition that has been battling Iran-backed rebels across the country since March 2015 has deployed Apache helicopters to support the loyalists fighting on ground.

The pro-Hadi forces “retreated from Zinjibar after they entered on Saturday night” from the city’s southern gate, an officer in Abyan told AFP.

“The withdrawal was decided following information that Al Qaida was preparing other car-bomb attacks against our troops,” added the officer who requested anonymity.

Government forces also launched an offensive on Saturday to drive the terrorists out of the neighbouring town of Jaar. Fighting there killed 25 Al Qaida fighters and four soldiers as loyalists seized Al Kud, five kilometres south of Zinjibar, military and medical sources said.

“After our withdrawal, Apache helicopters will target Al Qaida positions to secure the town,” said another officer, adding that helicopters had foiled two attempts to carry out bombings against troops using vehicles in Al Kud.

Meanwhile, the Arab coalition carried out a series of air raids against Al Qaida in Mukalla, a southeastern provincial capital the terrorists have controlled for the past year, military sources said.

Residents reported hearing heavy explosions as coalition jets struck Al Qaida-held arms depots in the city.

“The air raids are in preparation for a ground operation as part of a major military offensive to chase Al Qaida out of Mukalla and the entire Hadramawt province,” an officer said.

Coalition-backed forces have driven militants out of Aden, the southern city declared by Hadi as the country’s temporary capital after Al Houthi rebels overran Sana’a in September 2014.

And last week, government forces expelled militants of the terrorist network’s local branch – Al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula – from Huta, the provincial capital of Lahj.

The latest fighting comes as representatives of the government and the Iran-backed rebels continue with UN-sponsored peace talks in Kuwait, which began on Thursday.

The negotiations are under pressure to firm up a fragile ceasefire in their conflict that went into effect on April 11, and from which the terrorists are excluded.