A series of attacks at Yemen’s defence ministry have left at least 20 people dead and 37 injured, officials say.
A suicide car bomb blew up at the gates of the complex in Sanaa’s Bab al-Yaman district, at the entrance to the old city, and a gunbattle followed with suspected militants inside. Officials said the situation was under control and most of the gunmen dead. Yemeni security forces are fighting regional rebels and al-Qaeda, while combating lawlessness and army splits. No group has said it carried out Thursday’s attack. Correspondents say it bears the hallmarks of al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP). However, one government minister has blamed people linked to former President Ali Abdullah Saleh. “The attack took place shortly after working hours started at the ministry when a suicide bomber drove a car into the gate,” a ministry source said, quoted by Reuters. The blast was heard hundreds of metres away. “The explosion was very violent, the whole place shook because of it and plumes of smoke rose from the building,” an eyewitness told the agency. Continuous shooting Officials said a second car followed whose occupants opened fire at
the complex, and a battle ensued involving gunmen in military uniforms. The gunmen occupied a hospital at the complex, they added, but security forces later regained control of the building, which was badly damaged. “Most” of the gunmen were killed, officials said, but it was not clear how many were involved. However, the BBC’s Shaimaa Khalil in Sanaa says there was continuous shooting throughout the morning and some gunfire is continuing.
She describes Bab al-Yaman as a busy, bustling area with many shops. The incident comes aid tight security in the last few weeks following a series of hit-and-run attacks on officials by militants on motorbikes, blamed on AQAP. There were a large number of checkpoints and armoured vehicles on the
streets even before the attacks, our correspondent says. The country has been going through a painful transition since Mr Saleh was forced from office in 2011. Are you in Sanaa? Did you witness what happened? Please send us your eyewitness accounts using the form below. – BBC News
