Aden: A Saudi-led military coalition said on Monday it had completed a prisoner swap in Yemen, exchanging nine Saudi prisoners for 109 Yemeni nationals ahead of a planned truce and peace talks aimed at ending the year-long war with Houthi rebels.
The prisoner swap coincided with fresh air strikes by both the coalition and by US warplanes on militants in southern Yemen.
The coalition did not say which group the swap was made with, but the Houthi movement said on Sunday it had exchanged prisoners with Riyadh as a first step towards ending a humanitarian crisis prompted by the war.
Houthis have been battling forces loyal to Yemen's Saudi-backed President Abdrabbo Mansour Hadi since last March in a conflict that has cost more than 6,200 lives.
Saudi Arabia received its nationals on Sunday, the coalition statement published on Saudi state news agency SPA said. The alliance "hopes to begin a truce in conflict areas of the Republic of Yemen" it added.
Yemeni media said the nine Saudis were soldiers. The freed Yemenis had been detained during operations in Yemen, SPA said.
News site Yemen Now published a photo of a group of smiling, waving men in white robes and keffiyeh head scarves, which it said was of the soldiers. It was not immediately possible to verify the authenticity of the image.
In southern Yemen, local residents and medics said at least 21 people had been killed in overnight air raids by US drones on Al Qaeda targets in Abyan province, including the provincial capital Zinjibar.
Saudi-led war planes also struck militant targets in the suburbs of the southern Yemeni port city of Aden, the temporary headquarters of Hadi's government, where militants have repeatedly attacked coalition and Yemeni government targets in recent months. There were no immediate reports of casualties.
Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) has taken advantage of the war in Yemen to seize territory and operate more openly.
The group has carried out attacks against the Yemeni state for years, plotted to blow up US-bound airliners and claimed responsibility for the January 2015 attack in Paris on the French magazine Charlie Hebdo that killed 12 people.
Last week the United Nations said the warring parties had agreed to a cessation of hostilities starting at midnight on April 10 and to peace talks in Kuwait as part of a fresh push to end the crisis following two rounds of failed talks last year.