Car
bomb kills 31 people outside Yemen police college
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[January 07, 2015]
By Mohammed Ghobari
SANAA (Reuters) - A car bomb exploded
outside a Yemeni police college in Sanaa on Wednesday, killing 31 people
and wounding dozens, the interior ministry said, less than a week after
a devastating suicide bombing south of the capital.
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Yemen's sectarian conflict has worsened since September when the
Shi'ite Muslim Houthi militia seized Sanaa, in the latest upheaval
following the country's 2011 popular uprising which led to a change
of government and splits in the army.
Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), one of the Sunni militant
group's most active wings, had staged increasing numbers of attacks
across Yemen before the Houthi advance and has carried out more
bombings and shootings since.
The health ministry said 64 people were wounded by the powerful
explosion which sent a large plume of smoke into the sky above a
heavily congested part of the city near the central bank and defense
ministry.
"The situation is catastrophic. We arrived to find bodies piled on
top of each other," a paramedic at the scene told Reuters as
ambulances took casualties away.
"We found the top part of one person yelling, while his bottom half
was completely severed."
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for Wednesday's
bombing. Al Qaeda has in the past claimed they were behind similar
attacks.
The victims from the latest blast included students at the college
and people waiting in line to enroll with the police, the police
sources said, as well as passers by.
A policeman told Reuters that another car had been passing as the
bomb went off and was set on fire along with everyone inside.
The Interior Ministry said it was halting registration at the police
college, which takes place every year, for a week.
The U.S. embassy in Yemen condemned the attack, saying it showed the
"nihilistic vision and depravity of terror groups operating in
Yemen".
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Western and Gulf Arab countries fear that further instability could
weaken the country's government, giving AQAP more space to plot
attacks outside Yemen's borders. Yemen shares a long border with
major oil exporter Saudi Arabia.
Yemen's army has launched several concerted campaigns to dislodge al
Qaeda with the help of U.S. drone strikes, but the militants have
proved capable of entrenching themselves in largely lawless parts of
the Arabian Peninsula country where it has sympathy from some Sunni
tribes.
On Jan. 1 a suicide bomber killed at least 26 people at a cultural
center in the central Yemeni city of Ibb in an attack that appeared
to target the Houthi Shi'ite Muslim militia that seized the capital
in September and advanced into other areas.
Most attacks in the past four years have targeted Yemen's security
infrastructure. A suicide bomber killed more than 90 people in May
2012 at a military parade, and a coordinated assault on a military
hospital a year ago killed more than 50.
(Writing by Angus McDowall and Yara Bayoumy; Editing by Dominic
Evans)
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