World

Islamic State group claims deaths of 54 government recruits killed in Yemen bomb

A bombing claimed by the Islamic State group in Aden has killed more than 50 pro-government troops who had been preparing to travel to Saudi Arabia to fight Houthi rebels. Picture by Wael Qubady, Associated Press
A bombing claimed by the Islamic State group in Aden has killed more than 50 pro-government troops who had been preparing to travel to Saudi Arabia to fight Houthi rebels. Picture by Wael Qubady, Associated Press A bombing claimed by the Islamic State group in Aden has killed more than 50 pro-government troops who had been preparing to travel to Saudi Arabia to fight Houthi rebels. Picture by Wael Qubady, Associated Press

AT least 54 pro-government recruits have been killed in a suicide car bombing claimed by the Islamic State group in Yemen's southern city of Aden, officials said.

The recruits were signing up to join a new unit the Saudis hope will ultimately be made up of 5,000 fighters.

The men were at a staging area near two schools and a mosque when a pick-up truck suddenly accelerated through the building's gate as a food delivery arrived, exploding amid the crowd, said witnesses.

"Bodies and body parts are scattered all over the place," said Mohammed Osman, a neighbour who rushed to the scene.

"It was a massacre," he said.

The death toll steadily rose throughout Monday and by mid-afternoon, the director of Aden's health ministry, Khidra Lasour, said 54 had died from the explosion.

Almost 70 people were wounded, including 30 seriously, and were being treated in area hospitals.

Security officials identified the bomber as one Ahmed Seif, distributing a photo of him smiling and holding an assault rifle next to a flag used by Islamic extremists as well as a rocket-propelled grenade launcher.

Aid group Doctors Without Borders reported on social media that their hospital in Aden had received 45 dead.

The IS-run Aamaq news agency said the attack was carried out "by a fighter from the Islamic State who targeted a recruitment centre."

Security at the site was lax, according to Ahmed al-Fatih, who had been working at the centre.

"There was no consideration of security," he said.

"So it was easy for al Qaida or Daesh to pull off such an act," he added, using an Arabic acronym to refer to IS.

Yemen is embroiled in a civil war pitting the internationally recognized government and a Saudi-led coalition against the Shiite Houthi rebels, who are allied with army units loyal to a former president.

The fighting has allowed al Qaida and an IS affiliate to expand their reach, particularly in the south.

The new unit with which the recruits killed were training will deploy to the Saudi cities of Najran and Jizan, near the border with Yemen, after training.

The Houthis control most of northern Yemen, including the border regions and the capital, Sanaa.

The UN and rights groups estimate at least 9,000 people have been killed since fighting escalated in March 2015 with the start of Saudi-led air strikes targeting the Houthis and their allies.

Some three million people have been displaced inside the country, the Arab world's poorest.

UN-mediated peace talks in Kuwait were suspended earlier this month with no signs of progress.

The Houthis and forces allied to former president Ali Abdullah Saleh seized Yemen's capital, Sanaa, in September 2014, forcing the internationally recognized government to flee the country.

The Saudi-led campaign against the Houthis has pushed them out of southern Yemen, but has failed to dislodge them from Sanaa and the rest of the north.