Aden / AFP
A suicide bomber targeted the police chief of Yemen’s second city Aden on Thursday in the latest attack against senior officials in the base of the Saudi-backed government, a security official said.
The bombing came after loyalist forces backed by a Saudi-led military coalition seized the key southeastern port city of Mukalla and the nearby airport and oil facilities from Al-Qaeda, ending a year-long occupation by the extremists.
General Shallal Shayae escaped unharmed from the attack but one guard was wounded when the bomber blew up a vehicle packed with explosives, the official said.
A witness said the bomber, dressed as a woman, was stopped at a checkpoint on the perimeter of the compound around the general’s house, where he blew himself up.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the bombing, but Shayae has survived attacks by extremists more than once.
In February, suspected Al-Qaeda militants opened fire on a convoy carrying Shayae and Aden governor Aidarus Al Zubaidi, but they escaped unharmed.
Shayae and Zubaidi also survived a car bombing that targeted their convoy in Aden on January 5 killing two of their guards. The port city has seen a growing jihadist presence since loyalist forces backed by the Saudi-led coalition drove Houthi Shiite rebels out of the city in July.
For the first 12 months of the intervention that the coalition launched in March last year, it focused its firepower on the rebels, creating a power vacuum that was exploited not only by Al-Qaeda, but also by rival extremists of the IS group.
As a ceasefire with rebels went into effect on April 11, the loyalists and their allies turned their guns on the extemists, driving them out of a string of southern provincial capitals and imposing heavy losses.