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Yemen rebels storm presidential palace in Aden

Yemeni rebels stormed President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi's palace in his former southern stronghold Aden on 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.

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A Yemeni man receives treatment at a hospital in the southern city of Aden after he was wounded during an offensive by Shiite Huthi rebels and allied army units in the central neighbourhood of Crater.
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Yemeni rebels stormed President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi's palace in his former southern stronghold Aden on 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 Hadi supporters, appeared to further douse prospects of his returning any time soon from neighbouring Saudi Arabia.

"Dozens of Huthi militia and their allies arrived in armoured troop carriers and entered Al-Maashiq presidential palace," said a senior security official who witnessed their advance.

Heavy clashes, including tank shelling, erupted afterwards between the rebels and their opponents inside the compound, a member of the pro-Hadi militia said. At least 44 people -- including 18 civilians -- were reported dead on Thursday in fierce fighting between opponents and supporters of Hadi in the southern port city.

"There are bodies and wounded in the streets and nobody dares to approach," said Khaled al-Shaie, a resident in the central neighbourhood of Crater.

The Huthis, allied with army units loyal to former president Ali Abdullah Saleh, have seized swathes of the country including the capital Sanaa. Hadi fled to Aden from the capital after the Huthi Shiite rebels seized power in February, and the palace came under fire from warplanes twice during his stay. He went into hiding last week as the rebels bore down on what was his last stronghold, later surfacing in the Saudi capital as Riyadh launched an air war on the rebels.

Saudi Arabia announced today its first casualties since launching the offensive, with one soldier killed and 10 more wounded by gunfire from across the Yemeni border. In the coastal city of Mukalla in southeast Yemen, Al-Qaeda militants stormed a Hadramawt provincial prison and freed more than 300 inmates, including one of their leaders, a security official said. Khalid Batarfi had been held for more than four years, the official told AFP. Two guards and five inmates were killed in clashes, the official said.

Batarfi is among Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula's (AQAP) top regional commanders, known for his leading role in a 2011-2012 battle with government troops during which extremists seized large parts of the south and east.

Al-Qaeda militants also clashed today with troops guarding the local administration complex in Mukalla, a branch of the central bank and the police headquarters, the official said.

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