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Daesh car bomb kills dozens of pro-Saudi militants in Yemen’s Aden

Yemenis inspect debris at the site of a car bombing attack claimed by the Daesh Takfiri terrorist group on August 29, 2016 at a recruitment center in the southern Yemeni city of Aden. (AFP photo)

A bomb attack targeting forces loyal to Yemen’s resigned president, Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi, has killed dozens of recruits and injured scores of others.

Sources close to the resigned Yemeni government in the port city of Aden said Monday that an attacker detonated his explosives-laden car after he drove into a compound of militant recruits in the city’s Mansurah district.

The Health Ministry put the number of those killed at 54 while aid group Doctors Without Borders said 45 dead were received in their hospital in Aden.

Medical sources from the three hospitals where the victims were taken put the death toll at 60, although they could not corroborate that all the dead were recruits.

Pro-Hadi sources said most of those killed were preparing to travel to Saudi Arabia to fight against fighters of the Houthi Ansarullah movement.

They said the men had been signing up to join army units in Saudi cities of Najran and Jizan, near the border with Yemen.

The Daesh Takfiri terrorist group, which is mainly operating in Iraq and Syria, claimed responsibility for the attack, saying it aimed to dismantle the Saudi-run recruitment center.

People gather at the scene of an explosion following an attack by a bomber who drove a car laden with explosives into a compound run by local militants in the port city of Aden, Yemen, August 29, 2016. (Reuters photo)

“Bodies and body parts are scattered all over the place ... it was a massacre,” said a resident of Aden who was close to the site of the explosion.

Saudi Arabia’s extensive assistance to pro-Hadi militants, which started after Hadi fled to Aden in early 2015, has failed to undermine the Houthis and allies who control the capital, Sana’a.

Saudi Arabia’s air campaign against the Yemenis has killed about 10,000 people since it began over 18 months ago.

Rights campaigners and international organizations have fiercely criticized the Saudi airstrikes, which are accompanied by ground fighting, saying they mainly target civilians in the impoverished Arab country.


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