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Nearby residents also reported heavy gunfire and plumes of smoke rising from the building, as well as ambulances leaving the area. The eyewitness said the attackers drove up in a car and a minivan, parked by a neighboring hotel and blew up the security building's entrance with rocket-propelled and hand grenades. The made their getaway under heavy gunfire, the eyewitness said. Hospital officials said at least 15 people had been brought to the local hospital in Aden but did not say if any were dead. U.S. officials are concerned Yemen is becoming the next significant terror staging ground for al-Qaida and say insurgents, including individuals from the U.S., are training in militant camps in Yemen's vast lawless spaces. Saturday's attack comes after a string of al-Qaida prison breaks. In 2003, 10 men escaped from the same building in Aden, including one later convicted of involvement in the plot to blow up the USS Cole in 2000, killing 17 American sailors in what was one of al-Qaida's most dramatic pre-9/11 attacks. And in 2006, 23 prominent al-Qaida prisoners escaped from a different facility, making their way out though a dugout tunnel that emerged in a mosque outside the prison. That escape boosted the strength of al-Qaida's offshoot in Yemen, a process that accelerated in January 2009 when it merged with Saudi al-Qaida militants to form al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula.
[Associated
Press;
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