Upper

Friday 20 March 2015

Yemen: Bombs kill 120 at mosques; ISIS purportedly lays claim

Armed men inspect damage following an explosion at Al Badr mosque in Sanaa on Friday, March 20. Deadly explosions in Yemen's capital rocked two mosques serving a minority Muslim group that recently conquered the city. The blasts happened at mosques that serve members of the Zaidi sect of Shiite Islam -- followed by the Houthi rebels who recently took control of the capital.
Suicide bombers on Friday attacked two mosques frequented by Shiite rebels who recently seized control of Yemen's capital, killing 120 people and injuring more than 300 others, two officials with the rebel group said.

The mosques in Sanaa served members of the minority Zaidi sect of Shiite Islam -- the sect followed by the Houthi militant group that recently took control of the capital of the majority Sunni Muslim nation and forced President Abdu Rabu Mansour Hadi to flee.

It's one of the worst recent, single days of violence during a complicated struggle for control of a country where the Shiite rebels are opposed not only by Hadi supporters and Sunni Muslim tribes, but also the Sunni Muslim terror group al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, which exerts control in some rural areas of the country.

Among those killed Friday was prominent Houthi religious leader Murtatha Al Mahathwari, the state-run Saba news agency said.

Video distributed by Reuters showed people removing bodies from one of the mosques, where a carpeted floor was littered with debris.

No claims of responsibility for the blasts were immediately made public.

Also Friday, a separate explosion rocked a government compound in the Houthi stronghold city of Saada -- 180 kilometers (112 miles) northeast of Sanaa -- killing two people and seriously injuring a third, according to Abu Khalil Al Ameri, a local Houthi security official.

The attacks came two months after Houthis -- who have long felt marginalized by the majority Sunnis in Yemen and have battled the central government for more than a decade -- seized the presidential palace in Sanaa.

The explosions also came a day after deadly fighting erupted between Houthi-controlled forces and military units still loyal to Hadi in the port city of Aden, about 300 kilometers (186 miles) southeast of Sanaa.

The Houthi takeover of Sanaa stunned governments of Western nations, including the United States, which had a long relationship with Yemen's leader, working with the regime to target AQAP militants.

U.S. officials frequently say AQAP is one of the most dangerous terror groups in the world, based on their attempts to attack U.S. interests, including an attempt to blow up an American jetliner over Detroit in December 2009.

The United States, along with most European and Persian Gulf countries, suspended operations in their embassies this year after the Houthis took Sanaa. But the United States' anti-AQAP drone program in Yemen continued, with a U.S. drone strike killing senior AQAP cleric Harith bin Ghazi al-Nadhari and three other people in Shabwa province on January 31. Read the full story here

No comments :

Post a Comment

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...