*** To the Garden of Aden | THE DAILY TRIBUNE | KINGDOM OF BAHRAIN

To the Garden of Aden

Yemen’s President returns to his war-torn country from exile

Aden

President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi returned to war-ravaged Yemen yesterday after six months in exile in Saudi Arabia, as loyalist forces fight to advance on the rebel-held capital.

Only hours earlier, warplanes from a Saudi-led coalition killed at least 21 people in Sanaa, a day after thousands of sympathisers took to the streets of the capital to celebrate a year since its seizure by the Iran-backed Shia Huthi rebels.

Hadi, who is recognised by the international community, arrived on board a Saudi military aircraft that landed at an airbase adjoining the civilian airport in Yemen's second city Aden, according to a security official.

Aden was Hadi's last refuge when he fled the rebel-controlled capital after they took over the government.

Much of the city has been reduced to rubble by the months of ferocious fighting, with the rebels backed by former soldiers loyal to ousted president Ali Abdullah Saleh.

Prime Minister Khaled Bahah and several government ministers returned last week to the port city, which was retaken from the rebels in mid-July.

The Saudi-led coalition launched airstrikes against the rebels on March 26, and expanded its military campaign into a ground operation in July.

Hadi's return comes ahead of the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha, or the Feast of the Sacrifice.

In July, Hadi said that "Aden will be the key to Yemen's salvation," in a televised address marking the end of the holy Muslim fasting month of Ramadan.

Since then, the Huthis have lost five southern provinces to Hadi loyalists, who are now waging a major offensive in oil-rich Marib province east of the capital.

The rebels still control much of northern and central Yemen.

 - Peace talks collapse -

Forces loyal to Hadi began an all-out offensive on September 13 against the Huthis in Marib, aiming to retake the capital a year after it fell to the insurgents.

A day later, Hadi's government backed out of UN-brokered peace talks in Oman after saying only days earlier that it was going to take part.

Hadi's office said at the time that the government would not attend talks unless the rebels first accept UN Resolution 2216 demanding their withdrawal from territory they have captured.

Loyalists have also been locked in fierce fighting for control of Yemen's third city Taez, which like Marib is seen as a crucial gateway to Sanaa.

The United Nations says nearly 4,900 people have been killed since late March in Yemen. The UN aid chief has called the scale of human suffering "almost incomprehensible".

In the latest bloodshed, Saudi-led warplanes on Tuesday killed 21 people, including civilians, in a raid that targeted Huthi fighters in the Sabeen neighbourhood of Sanaa, a medical official said.

The death toll was likely to rise because some people were missing, another medical source said, as rescuers combed the rubble.