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Taiz, Yemen's 3rd largest city, seized by Shia rebels

Shia rebels backed by supporters of former president Ali Abdullah Saleh seized Yemen's third largest city of Taiz and its airport on Sunday, security and military officials said, as thousands took to the streets in protest.

Thousands demonstrate in Taiz, capital of Yemen's most populous province, against rebels' advance

Anti-Houthi protesters demonstrate in Yemen's southwestern city of Taiz March 21, 2015. In Taiz, a mainly Sunni city in southern Yemen, Houthi forces on Saturday fired on hundreds of people protesting against their advance across the country, but there were no immediate reports of casualties. (Anees Mahyoub/Reuters)

Shia rebels backed by supporters of former president Ali Abdullah Saleh seized Yemen's third largest city of Taiz and its airport on Sunday, security and military officials said, as thousands took to the streets in protest.

If the rebels hold onto the city, the capital of Yemen's most populous province, it would be a major blow to embattled current President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi, who established a base in the southern city of Aden just 140 kilometres away after fleeing the rebel-held capital last month.

The seizure comes a day after the rebels, known as Houthis, called for a general mobilization against forces loyal to Hadi, who had just given a defiant speech challenging the Houthis in his first public address since leaving Sanaa.

Brig. Gen. Hamoud al-Harathi, the commander of special forces units based in Taiz, rejected Hadi's legitimacy as president. Meanwhile, thousands demonstrated in the city against both the Houthis and Saleh, prompting the rebels to disperse them by firing into the air and beating them back with batons.

The security officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to brief the press.

The Shia rebels swept into Sanaa in September and now control it and nine of the country's 21 provinces.

The turmoil has undermined Yemen's ability to combat al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, the target of a U.S. drone program, and the country now also faces a purported affiliate of the extremist group Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, which claimed responsibility for a series of suicide bombings killing at least 137 people Friday.

A day earlier, U.S. troops evacuated a southern air base crucial to the drone program after al-Qaeda militants seized a nearby city.

All these factors could push the Arab world's most impoverished country, united only in the 1990s, back toward civil war.