Arab Times

Attack on Shiites in Yemen capital kills 28

IS claims organised assault Zarif back at N-talks

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SANAA, June 30, (AFP): An attack on Houthi rebel leaders in Yemen’s capital claimed by the Islamic State group killed at least 28 people, medics said Tuesday, the latest anti-Shiite assault by the Sunni extremists.

Yemen was previously the preserve of IS’s jihadist rival alQaeda, which controls swathes of the south and east, but since March the group has claimed a string of high-profile attacks.

The car bomb late Monday targeted Houthi rebel chief brothers Faycal and Hamid Jayache during a gathering to mourn the death of a family member, a security source said. Eight women were among the dead. Houthi rebels closed down the surroundin­g area in the centre of Sanaa after the attack, only allowing through emergency services to help evacuate the victims, witnesses said.

The explosion blew a crater in the road, took chunks out of nearby walls and left debris strewn across the street.

In a statement posted online, IS said it had organised the attack on what it called a “Shiite nest”.

The jihadist group considers Shiites heretics and has repeatedly targeted them not only in Yemen but in countries across the region.

Just Friday, a Saudi IS suicide bomber killed 27 people and wounded 227 in a Shiite mosque in Kuwait.

In Yemen, IS claimed a car bombing that killed two people outside a Shiite mosque in Sanaa on June 20 and a series of attacks in the capital four days earlier that killed 31.

The jihadist group, which on Monday marked the first anniversar­y of the declaratio­n of its “caliphate” in Iraq and Syria, launched its Yemen campaign in March with a series of bombings of Shiite mosques that killed 142 people.

The deadly attacks have overshadow­ed the operations of IS’s rival in Yemen, al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.

AQAP has taken advantage of the Houthi rebellion to consolidat­e its grip of the southeaste­rn province of Hadramawt, overrunnin­g its capital Mukalla in March.

And it is still regarded as the network’s most dangerous branch by Washington, which has kept up a drone war against its leaders inside Yemen. But analysts said that IS was now clearly in the ascendant. IS is “in the process of supplantin­g AQAP, which is becoming just one of a number of forces in the Sunni tribal camp in southern Yemen,” said Mathieu Guidere, professor of Islamic studies at the University of Toulouse in France.

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