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A picture taken on May 3, 2016 shows a general view of the streets with banners hung by Al-Qaeda militants announcing Islamists' orders of streets, in the Yemeni port of Mukalla, in the Hadramawt province, 480 km (300 mi) east of Aden. Residents of Yemen's Mukalla have breathed a sigh of relief after government forces drove out Al-Qaeda militants who ruled the southeastern key city with an iron fist. Banners announcing Islamists' orders remain in place in the port city that has a population of 200,000 people and is capital of the vast desert province of Hadramawt. But jihadists have vanished since April 24 after forces loyal to President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi, backed by special Emirati and Saudi forces, stormed the city. / AFP PHOTO / STRINGER

Al Qaeda militants began to pull out of two southern Yemeni town on Thursday, residents said, following weeks of mediation by tribesmen for them to exit peacefully rather than resist a Gulf-backed offensive.

Dozens of fighters in Zinjibar and Jaar, the two largest towns in southwestern Abyan province, were seen leaving with their weapons to the surrounding countryside.

Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, widely considered the most dangerous branch of the global militant group, took advantage of over a year of war in Yemen to seize towns along a 600-km (370-mile) stretch of Arabian Sea coastline.

But Yemeni troops backed by a Saudi-led military coalition pushed the group out of its main base in the port city of Mukalla late last month, depriving them of the estimated $2 million a day in revenue from port taxes and fuel smuggling.

Saudi Arabia and its Gulf Arab allies intervened in the civil war in Yemen on March 26 last year in support of Yemen’s government after it was pushed into exile by the Iran-allied Houthi group.

The war has killed more than 6,200 people, displaced more than 2.5 million and caused a humanitarian catastrophe in one of the world’s poorest countries.

Coalition bombing had mostly ignored the steady rise of AQAP until forces funded and trained by the United Arab Emirates launched a surprise attack to win Mukalla last month.

But an armed push toward Qaeda-held towns in Abyan and neighbouring Lahj province proved more difficult, and militants launched repeated suicide attacks against Yemeni forces.

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