Yemen fighting and suicide bomb kill 48

Yemen fighting and suicide bomb kill 48
A suicide bomber killed eight people at a Yemeni army base Friday as clashes between pro-government forces and Houthi rebels left 35 dead, while another five civilians died in shelling.
2 min read
25 February, 2017
Yemen has been gripped by violence since the start of the Saudi-led military intervention [AFP]

A suicide bomber killed eight people at a Yemeni army base Friday as clashes between pro-government forces and Houthi rebels left 35 dead, while another five civilians died in shelling, security and local officials said.

The bomber blew up his vehicle at the entrance to Najda Camp in Abyan province's capital Zinjibar, just 55 kilometres (33 miles) from second city Aden where the government is based.

The attacker failed to get through the gate and heavy exchanges of fire ensued as other assailants tried to penetrate it.

The explosives were concealed in the back of a pick-up truck under a pile of firewood, the sources said.

Al-Qaeda, which has taken advantage of nearly two years of fighting between loyalists and rebels who control the capital Sanaa to entrench their presence in swathes of the south, claimed responsibility for the attack, the SITE Intelligence Group reported.

Further north, in the central province of Baida, fierce clashes erupted Friday between pro-government tribes and Houthi rebels, a local official said.

Twenty rebels and six tribal fighters were killed in heavy fighting near Walad Rabi district, the source said, adding that the clashes flared when the Houthis tried to take control of a tribal territory.

Nine other rebels died when tribal fighters ambushed their convoy in the Sawmaa region, another area of tension between rebels and local tribes, the official said.

Relations are tense between the Houthis and tribal fighters in central Yemen, where the rebels, who hail from the country's north, have sought to expand the territory under their control.

In Marib, east of Sanaa, five civilians were killed on Friday in shelling blamed on Houthi fighters, local officials said.