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Yemen prison break: Al-Qaeda suspects among 1,200 escaped inmates, say officials | Yemen prison break: Al-Qaeda suspects among 1,200 escaped inmates, say officials |
(about 1 hour later) | |
A mass jailbreak in Yemen saw around 1,200 prisoners – many of whom al-Qaeda suspects – escape after guards deserted their posts during heavy fighting, officials said. | |
A mass jailbreak in Yemen saw around 1,200 prisoners – many of whom al-Qaeda suspects – escape after guards deserted their posts during heavy fighting, officials said. | |
The incident is the biggest in a series of prison breaks that have freed Yemeni militants in recent years and signals the further erosion of the state amid a raging civil war. | |
“Groups of al Qaeda supporters ... today attacked the central prison in the city of Taiz and more than 1,200 of the dangerous prisoners escaped,” state news agency Saba quoted a security official as saying. | |
Another local official told Reuters some of the escapees were “suspected of belonging to al Qaeda” but said they left amid heavy clashes between warring militias in the city. | |
Shi'ite Muslim Houthi fighters entered Taiz in March, in a southward push from their base in the capital Sanaa that drew military intervention from a Saudi Arabian-led coalition. | |
But three months of air strikes have yet to push back the group and units in Yemen's army that are loyal to Houthi ally Ali Abdullah Saleh, the country's ex-president. | |
The security official said army forces linked to Saleh allowed the prisoners to escape as the militiamen, dubbed “popular committees” by their supporters, advanced. | |
“Heavy fighting took place near the central prison and the popular committees approached and seized control of the area, but Saleh's forces opened the prison doors,” the official said. | |
Another group of al-Qaeda militants escaped from a prison in the eastern city of Mukalla in April after army forces suddenly quit the city. | |
Al-Qaeda and other hardline Sunni groups condemn the Houthis as apostates worthy of death, and the two groups are fighting each other in several areas in central Yemen. | |
Reuters | Reuters |