Islamic State's Yemen branch claimed responsibility for two bombings
at a mosque in a northern district of the capital Sana'a, that media run
by the Houthi militia said killed at least 28 people and wounded 75 on
Wednesday.
The al-Mo'ayyad mosque, run by the Houthis in the
al-Jarraf neighbourhood of Sana'a, has previously been targeted by the
ultra-radical Islamic State, who regard the Iran-allied Houthis as
heretics.
The Houthi-controlled Saba news agency said in a text
message that the first explosion was caused by a suicide bomber in the
al-Mo'ayyad mosque, followed by a car bomb blast that targeted medics
outside the building.
A civil war in Yemen escalated in March when
a coalition of Arab states led by Saudi Arabia intervened to roll back
the hold of Iran-allied Houthi militia over much of the country and to
reinstate the government from its exile in Riyadh.
The
Houthis took control of the capital Sana'a a year ago. More than 4 500
people have been killed in the Arabian Peninsula country's conflict.
Earlier
on Wednesday, two Red Cross employees were shot dead in the northern
Yemeni province of Amran by an unknown attacker, the international aid
group said, in a rare case of violence against humanitarian workers in
the war.
Thursday, September 03, 2015
ISIS claims bomb attacks at Yemeni mosque
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