Gunmen kill senior Yemen police officer in Aden

Attack comes a day after after the temporary capital's police chief escaped a suicide bombing

A Tribal gunman loyal to the Shia Huthi movement holds his weapon on April 16, 2015 in the capital Sanaa PHOTO: AFP

ADEN:
Gunmen killed a colonel in Yemen's second city Aden on Friday, a day after the temporary capital's police chief escaped a suicide bombing.

The unidentified gunmen on a motorbike opened fire at the traffic police chief, Colonel Marwan Abdulalim, as he was in his car going to the weekly Friday prayers in central Aden, a security official said.

The attack is the latest targeting senior officials in Aden, the base of the Saudi-backed government. Many of the attacks have been claimed by Al-Qaeda or the Islamic State group.

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On Thursday, a suicide bomber blew up a vehicle packed with explosives when he was stopped at a checkpoint on the perimeter of the compound around police chief General Shallal Shayae's house.


Shayae was unharmed in the attack but a security official said one guard was wounded.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attacks that come after loyalist forces backed by a Saudi-led military coalition seized the key southeastern port city of Mukalla and nearby airport and oil facilities from Al-Qaeda, ending a year-long occupation by the militants.

Government forces also recaptured Huta, another provincial capital further west, this month.

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Military sources in Huta told AFP that authorities were on Friday defusing some 250 landmines and 60 explosive devices militants had planted near government buildings before fleeing the city.

The Yemen-based Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula is regarded by Washington as the network's most dangerous branch, and AQAP militants have come under repeated US air and drone strikes.
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