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Yemeni pro-government fighters walk in Zinjibar, the capital of Yemen's southern province of Abyan, after they recaptured the town from al-Qaeda jihadists. Yemeni pro-government forces, backed by Saudi-led air strikes, entered Zinjibar as they launched an offensive to recapture the southern Abyan province and its capital from Al-Qaeda jihadists. Image Credit: AFP

Aden: An Al Qaida suicide bomber killed four Yemeni soldiers in an attack on Thursday in the southern Abyan province, where government forces have launched an anti-terror offensive, a military official said.

The attacker rammed his car into two military vehicles parked on a road linking the towns of Loder and Moudia in Abyan province, the source said.

“Four soldiers were killed and others were wounded,” the official said.

Military sources said the bombing was a retaliation attack by Al Qaida after government troops recaptured parts of Abyan, including provincial capital Zinjibar.

Government forces, backed by air power from a Saudi-led coalition, launched the offensive to retake Abyan on Sunday, after they failed to recapture the vast province earlier this year.

Al Qaida and Daesh terrorists have exploited a power vacuum in Yemen to expand their presence in the country’s south and southeast.

Yemeni authorities had trained hundreds of soldiers in the nearby province of Aden over the past two months to retake Abyan.

The Arab coalition, which intervened against Iran-backed rebels in March last, began supporting the government’s war on terrorists this year.

The United States has also pressed a drone war against them.

Washington considers the Yemen-based Al Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, or AQAP, to be the extremist network’s deadliest franchise.