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		Qaeda Gunmen Storm Yemeni City, 30 People Killed 
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		[May 24, 2014] 
		By Mohammed Mukhashaf and Mohamed Ghobari
 ADEN, Yemen (Reuters) - At least 30 people 
		were killed in an overnight raid by gunmen on a city in southeastern 
		Yemen, residents and a local official said on Saturday, as al Qaeda 
		continues its fightback against a government offensive in the country.
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			 Armed with rocket-propelled grenades, mortars and explosives, 
			attackers drove in from the surrounding desert on 15 pickup trucks 
			into Seyoun after detonating a car bomb at the entrance to the city 
			in Hadramout province. 
 Al Qaeda has carried out many hit-and-run attacks since the Yemeni 
			army drove it from its southern strongholds in Abyan and Shabwa 
			provinces last month.
 
 The West is concerned the group could use Yemen, which borders major 
			oil producer Saudi Arabia, as a base for international attacks.
 
 The militants targeted at least seven locations, including the main 
			military posts, the local police headquarters, bank branches and the 
			airport.
 
 Calling the raid a "treacherous terrorist act", the commander of the 
			local military division said the army had regained control of the 
			city.
 
 
			 
			Major General Mohammed al-Somla said a number of people had been 
			killed and wounded during the attack on his base and other 
			locations.
 
 The army had driven attackers out of the city and was using 
			warplanes, he said in a statement on the Defence Ministry website.
 
 A local official, who asked not to be identified, said 20 attackers 
			and 10 members of the security services were killed in the fighting.
 
 "They wanted to capture the city and control it," the official told 
			Reuters.
 
 CASUALTIES
 
 Residents said the city's electricity supply was cut during the 
			attack and they heard explosions and gunfire throughout the night. 
			The militants briefly captured some buildings before withdrawing 
			early on Saturday.
 
 Local officials said they suspected the attack was led by Jalal 
			Balaidi, a senior al Qaeda figure in the region.
 
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			Hadramout province stretches from the port of Mukalla in the south 
			to the Saudi border, through arid valleys and empty desert, 
			landscape al Qaeda uses to its advantage across the Middle East.
 A regional website, Al-Mukalla Al-Yawm, said the attackers were 
			wearing Yemeni army uniforms. It said that dozens of casualties were 
			taken to local hospitals.
 
 A U.S. ally, with a population of 25 million, Yemen is trying to end 
			three years of political unrest, which began when mass protests 
			erupted in 2011 against Ali Abdullah Saleh, the president of 33 
			years, who stepped down.
 
 Apart from the fight against al Qaeda, the government faces a push 
			by southern separatists for independence and battles with rebels 
			from the Shi'ite Muslim Houthi movement, which is trying to extend 
			its control over the north.
 
 (Writing by Sami Aboudi and Sylvia Westall; Editing by Robin Pomeroy 
			and Lynne O'Donnell)
 
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