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Yemen govt vows to stay in Aden despite IS bombings

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Yemen's government has said it will stay in the country's temporary capital Aden despite a deadly Islamic State group attack on its headquarters which lightly wounded several ministers.

After a meeting late on Tuesday, the cabinet acknowledged that the attacks earlier in the day had been car bombings as claimed by IS and not rocket attacks by Iran-backed rebels as initially reported by government officials.

Two bombs targeted the government's temporary headquarters in Aden's Al-Qasr Hotel, lightly wounding several ministers although Prime Minister Khaled Bahah escaped unharmed. Two guards were killed.

Two more bombs hit military installations used by Saudi-led coalition troops, who have been battling the Shiite Huthi rebels since March in support of the Yemeni government.

IS claimed the attacks and published the names and photographs of the four suicide bombers it said had carried them out.

It was the first time that the jihadist group had claimed attacks on government and coalition targets. Previous attacks had targeted Shiite mosques frequented by the rebels.

A new suicide bombing outside a mosque in the rebel-held capital Sanaa killed seven people on Tuesday evening. There was no immediate claim of responsibility.

The coalition said that one Saudi and three Emirati soldiers were among the dead in Aden.

Yemenis gather as flames and smoke rise from Sheikh bin Farid palace  used as a base by the Saudi-le...
Yemenis gather as flames and smoke rise from Sheikh bin Farid palace, used as a base by the Saudi-led coalition forces, after it was attacked on October 6, 2015 on the outskirts of Aden
Saleh al-Obeidi, AFP

Bahah and his ministers only returned to the southern port city on September 16 after six months of exile in neighbouring Saudi Arabia.

The Yemeni government "insists on continuing its national and historical role during this exceptional phase from the temporary capital Aden until all parts of the country are liberated," said a statement issued after Tuesday's cabinet meeting.

It accused the rebels and their allies, who still control Sanaa and much of central and northern Yemen, of deliberately creating the power vacuum that has been exploited by the jihadists of IS and Al-Qaeda.

It said it held them "completely responsible for encouraging extremist and terrorist" groups, and pledged to save the country from the "chaos desired by the enemies and the regional powers they work for," an allusion to Shiite Iran.

Yemen’s government has said it will stay in the country’s temporary capital Aden despite a deadly Islamic State group attack on its headquarters which lightly wounded several ministers.

After a meeting late on Tuesday, the cabinet acknowledged that the attacks earlier in the day had been car bombings as claimed by IS and not rocket attacks by Iran-backed rebels as initially reported by government officials.

Two bombs targeted the government’s temporary headquarters in Aden’s Al-Qasr Hotel, lightly wounding several ministers although Prime Minister Khaled Bahah escaped unharmed. Two guards were killed.

Two more bombs hit military installations used by Saudi-led coalition troops, who have been battling the Shiite Huthi rebels since March in support of the Yemeni government.

IS claimed the attacks and published the names and photographs of the four suicide bombers it said had carried them out.

It was the first time that the jihadist group had claimed attacks on government and coalition targets. Previous attacks had targeted Shiite mosques frequented by the rebels.

A new suicide bombing outside a mosque in the rebel-held capital Sanaa killed seven people on Tuesday evening. There was no immediate claim of responsibility.

The coalition said that one Saudi and three Emirati soldiers were among the dead in Aden.

Yemenis gather as flames and smoke rise from Sheikh bin Farid palace  used as a base by the Saudi-le...

Yemenis gather as flames and smoke rise from Sheikh bin Farid palace, used as a base by the Saudi-led coalition forces, after it was attacked on October 6, 2015 on the outskirts of Aden
Saleh al-Obeidi, AFP

Bahah and his ministers only returned to the southern port city on September 16 after six months of exile in neighbouring Saudi Arabia.

The Yemeni government “insists on continuing its national and historical role during this exceptional phase from the temporary capital Aden until all parts of the country are liberated,” said a statement issued after Tuesday’s cabinet meeting.

It accused the rebels and their allies, who still control Sanaa and much of central and northern Yemen, of deliberately creating the power vacuum that has been exploited by the jihadists of IS and Al-Qaeda.

It said it held them “completely responsible for encouraging extremist and terrorist” groups, and pledged to save the country from the “chaos desired by the enemies and the regional powers they work for,” an allusion to Shiite Iran.

AFP
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