(Reuters) - A car
bomb exploded outside a police college in Yemen's capital Sanaa on
Wednesday, killing 35 people and wounding dozens, police said, less than
a week after a suicide bombing south of the capital left nearly 30
dead. Yemen's sectarian
conflict has worsened since September when the Shi'ite Muslim Houthi
militia seized Sanaa, deepening political divides that spawned a popular
uprising in 2011 and led to a change of government and splits in the
army. Al Qaeda in the
Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), one of the Sunni militant group's most active
wings, had staged increasing numbers of attacks across Yemen before the Houthi advance and has carried out more bombings and shootings since. Brigadier
Abdulaziz al-Qudsi, deputy general manager of Sanaa police, said that
68 people were also wounded by the explosion which sent a large plume of
smoke into the sky above a densely built up and congested part of the
city near the central bank and defense ministry. "The
situation is catastrophic. We arrived to find bodies piled on top of
each other," a paramedic at the scene told Reuters as ambulances took
casualties away. "We found the top part of one person yelling, while his bottom half was completely severed." Qudsi
said the initial investigation showed that a booby-trapped vehicle with
a driver and passenger in the front had been parked near where people
who wanted to register were standing beside an outside wall of the
police college. "They then
hurried out (of the bus) and escaped and then the bus explosion
happened at 7 a.m. (11.00 p.m. ET)," Qudsi was cited as saying by state
news agency Saba. He said several of those wounded were in critical
condition. There was no
immediate claim of responsibility for Wednesday's bombing. Al Qaeda has
in the past claimed they were behind similar attacks. "NIHILISTIC VISION" The
victims from the latest blast included students at the college and
people waiting in line to enroll with the police, the police sources
said, as well as passers-by. A
policeman told Reuters that another car had been passing as the bomb
went off and was set on fire along with everyone inside. The Interior Ministry said it was halting registration at the police college, which takes place every year, for a week. The U.S. embassy in Yemen condemned the attack, saying it showed the "nihilistic vision and depravity of terror groups operating in Yemen". Western
and Gulf Arab countries fear that further instability could weaken the
country's government, giving AQAP more space to plot attacks outside Yemen's borders. Yemen shares a long border with major oil exporter Saudi Arabia. Yemen's
army has launched several concerted campaigns to dislodge al Qaeda with
the help of U.S. drone strikes, but the militants have proved capable
of entrenching themselves in largely lawless parts of the Arabian
Peninsula country where it has sympathy from some Sunni tribes. On
Jan. 1 a suicide bomber killed at least 26 people at a cultural center
in the central Yemeni city of Ibb in an attack that appeared to target
the Houthi militia that seized the capital in September and advanced
into other areas. Most
attacks in the past four years have targeted Yemen's security
infrastructure. A suicide bomber killed more than 90 people in May 2012
at a military parade, and a coordinated assault on a military hospital a
year ago killed more than 50.
Car bomb kills 35 people outside Yemen police college
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