A Yemeni intelligence officer
was seriously wounded when his car exploded on Tuesday in the main southern
city of Aden, a security official told AFP.
The attack is the second in a week
against an intelligence officer in Aden after suspected al-Qaeda gunmen killed
Colonel Marwan al-Maqbali there on Thursday.
"Colonel Saleh al-Qadi was
seriously wounded in the explosion of a car that was probably
booby-trapped," the security official told AFP at the site of the Tuesday
attack.
"He was taken to the
hospital," the official said, standing near debris of the still-burning
vehicle in Aden's district of Crater.
He said that police could not
immediately know if the attack was carried out by al-Qaeda, blamed for most of
the increasingly common hit-and-run strikes targeting military personnel and
officials.
The jihadist group rarely claims
responsibility for such attacks, but did admit being behind a brazen daylight
assault on the defence ministry in Sanaa that killed 56 people on Dec. 5.
Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula
(AQAP) took advantage of a decline in central government control during Yemen's
2011 uprising to seize large swathes of territory across the south.
The militants were driven back in
June 2012 by a military offensive and the group has been further weakened by
U.S. drone strikes.
AQAP is considered by Washington to
be the most dangerous affiliate of the al-Qaeda network.
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