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Governor of Yemen’s Aden killed in car bomb claimed by Daesh

By AFP - Dec 06,2015 - Last updated at Dec 06,2015

People look at the wreckage of a car at the site of a car bomb attack that killed the governor of Yemen’s southern port city of Aden on Sunday (Reuters photo)

ADEN — A car bombing claimed by the Daesh terror group Sunday killed the governor of Yemen's second city Aden, a day after the UN's envoy visited to press for long-delayed peace talks.

A statement posted on Twitter by the extremist group said it was behind a blast that hit the convoy of Jaafar Saad in the Tawahi neighbourhood of the major port, killing him and eight bodyguards.

In a statement carried by the official Saba news agency, Aden security chief General Mohamed Mussad confirmed Saad's death and said six of his guards were also killed.

Images circulated on social media showed a wrecked car on fire on a main road in the southern city.

Saad was only recently appointed governor, and was known to be close to President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi who returned to Aden last month after several months in exile in Riyadh.

Pro-Hadi forces, aided by a Saudi-led coalition, have battled Iran-backed rebels in Yemen since March, after the insurgents overran the capital Sanaa and advanced south, forcing the government to flee to Saudi Arabia.

Fighting between the Houthi rebels and loyalist forces has plunged the impoverished nation into chaos, which militant groups have exploited to make sweeping gains, particularly in southern regions.

Aden's Tawahi district has become a known hideout for extremists, including Al Qaeda militants.

Daesh has claimed a string of attacks in Yemen, including the bombing of Hadi's government headquarters in October and multiple suicide attacks on mosques in Sanaa attended by Shiite worshippers that killed 142 people. 

It also claimed the killing of 50 soldiers in a November ambush in southeastern Hadramawt province. 

Its statement on Sunday threatened more attacks. 

The United Arab Emirates, whose forces are playing a pivotal role in supporting Hadi and are present in Aden, condemned Saad's killing.

"Such crimes will not weaken our common determination to bring back security and stability to the Yemen," said the UAE's State Minister for Foreign Affairs Anwar Gargash.

 

New blow to Hadi 

 

Saad's killing represents another blow for Hadi, who has struggled to secure the city since his forces and allies launched a widespread operation in July to retake five southern provinces — including Aden — from the Houthis. 

The counterattack has stalled around Taez, a strategic southwestern city under siege by the rebels and their allies.

The bombing came a day after the UN envoy to Yemen held talks with Hadi in Aden aimed at kickstarting peace talks.

Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed met Hadi to seek his agreement to convene negotiations with the rebels in Geneva next week, an official close to the president told AFP.

But the mission was "difficult", said the source, accusing the rebels of dragging their feet on implementing UN Security Council Resolution 2216 which calls for them to withdraw from occupied territory.

Foreign Minister Abdel Malak Al Mekhlafi told AFP that "the putschists are refusing to lay down their arms or to allow the government to carry out its duties" from Sanaa.

"They have not announced their list of negotiators" for the talks "and are trying to escalate the situation on the ground by bombing residential districts of Taez".

In a protest sent to the UN, Yemen's minister in charge of human rights, Ezzedine Al Isbahi, condemned the "massacres and atrocities" allegedly committed in Taez by the rebels that he said had killed 33 civilians last week, including four children.

 

The United Nations says more than 5,700 people have been killed in Yemen, almost half of them civilians, since the Saudi-led air campaign began in March in support of the government.

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