Off the wire
Dubai embraces Chinese Spring Festival celebrations  • Urgent: Prokopis Pavlopoulos elected as new president of Greece  • German envoy says Africa should take lead in neutralizing Rwandan rebels  • Spanish stock market rises 1 pct, closes at 10,805 points  • Former mayors of Cordoba demand historic site return to public domain  • Israel moves to ease restrictions on blockaded Gaza: officials  • UNHCR to hold conference on statelessness in West Africa  • British FTSE 100 closes flat on Wednesday  • French stock market index up 0.95 on Wednesday  • Greece postpones request for extension of loan agreement to Thursday  
You are here:   Home

Armed tribesmen attack oil company in SE Yemen, 6 killed

Xinhua, February 19, 2015 Adjust font size:

About six army personnel were killed and three others injured when armed tribesmen attacked an oil company in Yemen's southeastern province of Hadramout on Wednesday evening, a security official told Xinhua.

"A group of armed tribesmen carried out an attack on a foreign oil company based in Hadramout province, killing about six army soldiers in charge of guarding the institution headquarters," the local security official said on condition of anonymity.

"The tribal militants were attempting to seize the oil company, but army soldiers positioned around the building repulsed them after brief fighting," the security source said.

In the port city of Aden, secessionist gunmen clashed Wednesday with security forces, injuring about six soldiers and torching a military vehicle at the scene.

A top leader of the pro-secession Southern Movement identified as Bagash al-Aghbary was critically injured during the skirmishes with security forces in Aden, according to youth activists.

On Feb. 6, the Shiite Houthi group announced a unilateral move to dissolve the parliament of Yemen and form a presidential council to take power, which was rejected by Yemen's political parties and denounced by the Gulf Arab states.

The security situation deteriorated in Yemen in January when the Shiite Houthi group seized the presidential palace in Sanaa after deadly clashes with presidential guards.

President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi and Prime Minister Khaled Bahah submitted resignations on Jan. 22.

The Shiite Houthi group, also known as Ansarullah, has been expanding its influence southward since signing a UN-sponsored peace and power-sharing deal on Sept. 21, 2014 following deadly clashes. Endit