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Bombs at mosque in Yemen’s capital kill at least 20 people
By AP - Sep 02,2015 - Last updated at Sep 02,2015
SANAA — A Daesh-claimed suicide bomber and a subsequent car bombing killed at least 20 people Wednesday at a mosque in Yemen's rebel-held capital, Sanaa, amid the country's raging civil war, officials said.
The suicide bomber blew himself up inside the mosque during the evening call to prayers, while the car bomb exploded outside an entrance, they said. Medical officials said the death toll may rise with people now in operating rooms in several hospitals.
Witnesses said the car bomb exploded while people were carrying out the wounded from inside the mosque, adding to the casualties.
One witness, Hamid Ali, said the explosions left body parts and bloodied floors in the mosque frequented by both Sunni and Shiite Muslims. Those wounded pleaded for help.
In a message circulated on social media, Yemen's local Daesh affiliate claimed the bombing, identifying the suicide attacker as Quay Al Sanaani and saying the assault was revenge against the Shiite rebels known as Houthis that hold Sanaa. The Associated Press could not independently verify the message, though it resembled other claims of responsibility by the group and was shared by extremist sympathisers.
The Daesh affiliate in Yemen has carried out similar attacks targeting mosques, including a series of suicide bombings on March 20 in Sanaa that killed 137 people and wounding 345.
Yemen has been mired in violence since the Houthis captured Sanaa last September.
The Houthis are fighting alongside army units loyal to former president Ali Abdullah Saleh against forces loyal to exiled President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi as well as southern separatists and local militias. A Saudi-led and US-backed coalition has been launching air strikes against the rebels since March.
The conflict has killed over 2,100 civilians, according to the
United Nations.
Earlier Wednesday, gunmen shot dead two Yemenis working for the International Committee of the Red Cross on Wednesday as they were travelling from the northern Saada province to the capital, Sanaa, the group said.
Rima Kamal, an ICRC spokeswoman in Sanaa, says the two were killed in Amran province.
Both Amran and Saada are fully controlled by the Houthis.
The UN's humanitarian coordinator for the country, Johannes Van Der Klaauw, and U.N. humanitarian coordinator Stephen O'Brien both condemned the attack on the Red Cross workers.
Saudi Arabia's civil defence said Tuesday that seven people were wounded when a missile fired from inside Yemen struck three vehicles in Al Tuwal village in the Jizan border province.
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