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WAR REPORT
Qaeda advances on Syria army base near Idlib: monitor
by Staff Writers
Beirut (AFP) April 3, 2015


Qaeda seizes army base in southeast Yemen: military source
Aden (AFP) April 3, 2015 - Al-Qaeda militants in war-torn Yemen on Friday seized an army base in the southeastern city of Mukalla, which is now almost entirely under their control, a military official said.

Residents were seen fleeing the city in panic.

Al-Qaeda "took the headquarters of the 2nd Military Region in the afternoon without resistance", the official said, a day after the extremists stormed a prison in the city and freed hundreds of inmates.

The regional commander and his troops withdrew to military camps around the airport, one of the few areas in the city not yet under the control of Al-Qaeda, the official said.

The militants captured a tank and two armoured vehicles. Earlier they also took the city's port.

Members of Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) also paraded the black banner of the extremist network through the city of more than 200,000 people, witnesses said.

The Sunni extremists launched calls from mosques in the city for "jihad against Shiites", according to residents.

Yemen has sunk further into chaos since a Saudi-led coalition launched air strikes on March 26 against Shiite rebels and their allies who have seized large parts of the country including the capital Sanaa.

Observers have warned that AQAP, which Washington considers the network's deadliest franchise, could exploit the unrest to expand its foothold in Yemen.

Before the latest chaos erupted, Yemen had been a key US ally in the fight against Al-Qaeda, allowing Washington to carry out drone attacks on its territory.

Fighters from Al-Qaeda's Syrian affiliate and allied militants advanced Friday on a key government-held military base in northwestern Idlib province, a monitor said.

The advance follows the capture of provincial capital Idlib by Al-Nusra Front and its allies on Saturday.

"Violent clashes have been underway since Thursday night between the army and Al-Nusra and its allies... around the Mastuma base," the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

The base, seven kilometres (four miles) south of Idlib city, is the biggest regime base in the province, said Observatory director Rami Abdul Rahman.

The opposition groups had launched a "preventative attack on the base" where regime reinforcements were arriving ahead of a possible bid to recapture Idlib city, he said.

The Observatory added that clashes were underway between the Islamist forces and government troops in the area around the Shiite-majority village of Fuaa.

With the fall of Idlib city, regime forces in the province control only two towns and a handful of districts, along with the Abu Duhur military airport and five military bases.

Elsewhere in Syria, jihadists from the Islamic State group have pushed further into the Palestinian Yarmuk camp in Damascus and now control 70 percent it, according to the Observatory.

IS launched an assault Wednesday on the camp, after Palestinian groups inside arrested several jihadists.

Palestinian fighters and Syrian rebels initially pushed back the IS assault but the jihadist counter-attacked and have made fresh advances since Thursday inside the camp.

They have reportedly captured a square where the camp's 18,000 residents usually gather to receive aid handouts.

The UN agency for Palestinian refugees UNRWA expressed concern about the situation, saying it had been unable to deliver aid to the camp since Wednesday.

"UNRWA remains acutely anxious about the humanitarian impact of continuing armed conflict between armed groups inside Yarmuk," spokesman Chris Gunness said.

"With intense fighting continuing into a third day, the lives and safety of the 18,000 Palestinian and Syrian civilians inside Yarmouk are substantially threatened."

The Observatory said government forces were shelling parts of Yarmuk intensively while Palestinian fighters battling IS militants were running low on ammunition.

Yarmuk has been under government siege for more than a year.

But Syrian state media said the camp was under "the control of terrorist groups", adding that there had been no army presence in Yarmuk "for a long time".

It gave no further details. Syria's government and state media refers to all those seeking to oust President Bashar al-Assad as "terrorists."


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WAR REPORT
Yemen rebels seize presidential palace in Aden
Aden (AFP) April 2, 2015
Yemeni rebels seized President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi's palace in his former southern stronghold Aden Thursday, dealing a symbolic blow to the self-exiled leader despite a week of Saudi-led air strikes. As the war-torn country descended deeper into chaos, Al-Qaeda militants freed hundreds of inmates in a jailbreak. The advance by Iran-backed rebels deep into Aden, the last bastion of Had ... read more


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