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Aftermath of Mosque Bombings in Yemen
Aftermath of Mosque Bombings in Yemen
Residents combed through the rubble in Sana, Yemen, after two suicide bombers attacked the Badr mosque during Friday Prayer.
Publish Date March 20, 2015. Photo by Khaled Abdullah/Reuters.
SANA, Yemen â A previously unknown Yemeni affiliate of the Islamic State militant group claimed responsibility for killing more than 130 people on Friday in coordinated suicide bomb attacks on two Shiite mosques in the capital, Sana, accelerating the sectarian violence in a country edging closer to civil war.
Hospitals in the capital made urgent appeals for blood to treat the hundreds of people injured in the explosions at the Badr and Hashoush mosques, both attended by Zaydi Shiites. Another suicide bomber was detected before he could reach a mosque in the northern province of Saada, a stronghold of the Houthi rebel movement, which controls Sana and since September has been Yemenâs most dominant force.
An Interior Ministry official said at least 60 people were killed at each mosque, but the death toll is expected to rise.
The most recent attack on civilians in the capital was in January, when a car bomb killed more than 30 people outside a police academy.
Sunni extremists, including the Islamic State fighters and militants linked to an affiliate of Al Qaeda in Yemen, have carried out a number of deadly attacks against supporters of the Houthis, whose leaders are members of the Zaydi branch of Shiite Islam and are considered heretics by the Sunni militants.
But bombings of mosques have been rare, and in a recent statement on âunlawfulâ killings, Al Qaedaâs affiliate in Yemen condemned such attacks. Instead, a group calling itself Sana Province and claiming to be the Yemeni affiliate of the Islamic State claimed responsibility for Fridayâs bombings, raising the specter of a deadly, destabilizing new force in Yemenâs conflict.
âThis operation is but the tip of the iceberg,â the group said in an audio statement carried by the SITE Intelligence Group. âLet the polytheist Houthis know that the soldiers of the Islamic State will not rest and will not stay still until they extirpate them.â
The carnage on Friday came after days of fighting across Yemen, marking a violent new stage in a seven-month-old political crisis that is increasingly taking on the character of a civil war.
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The Divisions in Yemen
In early 2014, Shiite insurgents known as Houthis consolidated control over Yemenâs Saada Province. In recent months, they have expanded their influence.
Houthis have influence or are able to operate
Areas where Al Qaeda is able to operate
SHABWA PROVINCE
Qaeda stronghold
Areas where Al Qaeda is able to operate.
Houthis have influence or are able to operate
Areas where Al Qaeda is able to operate
SHABWA
PROVINCE
Qaeda
stronghold
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Yemen has been leaderless since January, when the Houthis tightened their grip on the capital and placed the president, Abdu Rabbu Mansour Hadi, along with his government, under house arrest.
Mr. Hadi later fled to the southern port city of Aden and declared that he was still the countryâs leader, splitting the country between competing centers of power. Diplomats, including those at the United Nations, have been unable to broker a compromise, as many regional powers, including Iran and Saudi Arabia, seem to have abandoned the effort, throwing their support behind either Mr. Hadi or the Houthis and inflaming the conflict.
Earlier this week, unidentified assassins shot and killed one of Yemenâs most prominent dissident journalists and a supporter of the Houthis, Abdulkarim al-Khaiwani, outside his home in Sana. On Thursday, violence spread to Aden in a day of rare factional clashes over control of the international airport and a security base.
The fighting in Aden pitted tribesmen and military units loyal to Mr. Hadi against a security unit seen as close to Yemenâs former president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, who has remained influential in the country and allied himself with the Houthis.
Photo
Victims of mosque bombings in the Yemeni capital were evacuated on Friday. There was no immediate claim of responsibility. Credit Khaled Abdullah/Reuters
There were more reports of fighting in the south on Friday. Warplanes bombed Mr. Hadiâs presidential compound in Aden for a second day, but did not cause any casualties, according to witnesses and security officials in the city.
Blood could be seen on the street outside the Badr mosque, where the bombers maximized the number of casualties by detonating their explosives inside but also among the overflow of worshipers outside. Witnesses said 12 members of one family were killed.
Two suicide bombers also attacked the Hashoush mosque, with one hiding his explosives in a fake cast on his leg, which he detonated after he was stopped at a checkpoint about 65 feet from the mosque entrance. The other bomber made it inside as the prayers ended.
âYemenis knew violence, but not this brutal,â said Farea al-Muslimi, a Sana-based political analyst, speaking about the assassinations, clashes and bombings over the last few days.
âThere are no norms,â he said. âItâs a very scary moment.â
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