Islamic State claims responsibility for explosion that killed governor of Yemen's southern Aden province
Security sources say several members of his entourage also died in the attack in Tawahi
ADEN:
Islamic State claimed responsibility for an explosion which killed the governor of Yemen's southern Aden province on Sunday.
In a statement posted on a messaging service, the group said it detonated an explosives-laden car as Jaafar Mohammed Saad's convoy was passing in a western district of Aden.
Residents and security sources earlier said Saad had been attacked by
rocket-propelled grenades or a suicide car bomber.
UAE troops dig in for a long war in Yemen
They said at least six of his entourage also died in the attack, which occurred while the governor was heading to work. Several other people were also wounded in the bombing. The sources had earlier said attackers had used rocket-propelled grenades to target Saad.
No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attack, but Islamist militants are operating in the city, four months after supporters of President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi and a mainly Gulf Arab coalition led by Saudi Arabia drove Iran-allied Houthi fighters from Aden, Yemen's second largest city.
Al Qaeda militants take over two south Yemen towns, residents say
Saad, a former general in the army of the former southern Yemen before the Marxist state merged with northern Yemen in 1990, was appointed governor in October. Hadi returned to Aden from Saudi Arabia last month, nearly eight months after he fled to escape the Houthi advance.
He has been trying to shore up security in the city and oversee fighting against the Houthis in the province of Taiz, north of Aden.
Islamic State claimed responsibility for an explosion which killed the governor of Yemen's southern Aden province on Sunday.
In a statement posted on a messaging service, the group said it detonated an explosives-laden car as Jaafar Mohammed Saad's convoy was passing in a western district of Aden.
Residents and security sources earlier said Saad had been attacked by
rocket-propelled grenades or a suicide car bomber.
UAE troops dig in for a long war in Yemen
They said at least six of his entourage also died in the attack, which occurred while the governor was heading to work. Several other people were also wounded in the bombing. The sources had earlier said attackers had used rocket-propelled grenades to target Saad.
No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attack, but Islamist militants are operating in the city, four months after supporters of President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi and a mainly Gulf Arab coalition led by Saudi Arabia drove Iran-allied Houthi fighters from Aden, Yemen's second largest city.
Al Qaeda militants take over two south Yemen towns, residents say
Saad, a former general in the army of the former southern Yemen before the Marxist state merged with northern Yemen in 1990, was appointed governor in October. Hadi returned to Aden from Saudi Arabia last month, nearly eight months after he fled to escape the Houthi advance.
He has been trying to shore up security in the city and oversee fighting against the Houthis in the province of Taiz, north of Aden.