Houthi forces pulled back from a central Aden district yesterday and warplanes from the Saudi-led coalition dropped weapons and medical aid to fighters defending the southern Yemeni city, a last symbolic foothold of the country’s absent President.

The Shi’ite Houthi fighters and their allies withdrew from Crater neighbourhood as well as one of Aden’s presidential residences which they seized a day earlier, residents and a local official said.

Their withdrawal followed overnight clashes and an air strike on the presidential palace at Ma’ashiq, overlooking Crater.

At least one Houthi tank was destroyed and another taken over by President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi’s loyalists, they said.

The war on the Houthis is now the biggest of several conflicts being fought out in Yemen

Saudi Arabia’s military intervention is the latest front in the Sunni Muslim kingdom’s widening contest with Shi'ite Iran for power in the region, a proxy struggle also playing out in Syria, Iraq and Lebanon.

The Iranian-allied Houthis, fighting alongside soldiers loyal to former president Ali Abdullah Saleh, emerged as the strongest force in Yemen after they took over the capital Sanaa in September.

Last month they advanced on Aden, where Hadi had retreated, prompting the response from Riyadh. Nine days of Saudi-led air strikes have destroyed much of their equipment and cut off any chance of outside reinforcement, but failed to halt their march on the port city.

Local militia forces said they killed 10 Houthis during the fighting which pushed the Shi'ite movement out of Crater.

They also said Houthis killed two medics and two patients when they open­ed fire on an ambulance ferrying casualties from Aden peninsula to hospital on the mainland.

Early yesterday warplanes from the coalition dropped crates of weapons and medical supplies by parachute over Tawahi, a district on the far end of the Aden peninsula which is still held by Hadi loyalists, fighters told Reuters.

The crates included light weapons, telecommunications equipment and rocket-propelled grenades, they said. The pro-Hadi newspaper Aden al-Ghad published pictures of at least one wooden crate attached to a parachute, which it said had landed in Aden. Local men were seen loading the crates onto pickup trucks.

Hadi fled Aden last week and has watched from neighbouring Saudi Arabia while the vestiges of his authority on the ground have eroded as the Houthis advanced.

The coalition, trying to reassert Hadi’s standing before any political settlement, has said that sending ground troops into Yemen remains an option but not an automatic move. Officials have declined to say whether special forces have already deployed. Saudi ambassador to Washington Adel al-Jubeir said on Thursday the kingdom does not have “formal” troops on the ground in Aden.

US government sources said on Thursday that, although Washington believes Saudi Arabia and its allies have deployed a military force along the border which is large enough to launch a full-scale invasion, there was no indication that Riyadh was planning such a move soon.

The war on the Houthis is now the biggest of several conflicts being fought out in Yemen, which is also grappling with a southern secessionist movement, tribal unrest and a powerful regional wing of al Qaeda.

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