A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, January 8, 2015
Yemen car bomb kills dozens near Sanaa police academy
7 January 2015
The vehicle exploded beside dozens of cadets and people standing in line
to enrol at the academy. Some unconfirmed reports said it was a suicide
attack.
Afterwards, body parts and debris from the car were strewn across the street.
There has so far been no claim of responsibility, but an offshoot of al-Qaeda has carried out similar attacks.
Yemen has experienced a wave of violence in recent months, with
militants from al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) battling Shia
Houthi rebels who have taken control of the capital.
'Catastrophic situation'
Wednesday's bombing took place early in the morning in a central part of
Sanaa near the central bank and the defence ministry building.
The explosion was heard across the city and a large plume of smoke was seen rising from the scene.
The victims included many cadets at the police academy and people who
had been waiting in line to enrol, as well as passersby, officials said.
"We were all gathering and... [the car] exploded right next to all of
the police college classmates," Jamil al-Khaleedi told the Associated
Press.
"It went off among all of them."
A paramedic at the scene described the situation as "catastrophic".
"We arrived to find bodies piled on top of each other," he told Reuters news agency.
The US embassy in Yemen condemned the attack, saying it "reveals the nihilistic vision and depravity of terror groups operating in Yemen".
Weak government
Yemeni security forces personnel have been targeted many times by AQAP
in the past four years. A suicide bomber killed more than 90 people in
2012 at a military parade in the capital and an assault on a military
hospital a year ago left more than 50 dead.
The jihadist group has exploited the chaos and instability that has
resulted from the uprising that forced longtime President Ali Abdullah
Saleh from power in 2011.
His successor, Abdrabbuh Mansour Hadi, has ordered a series of military
offensives on AQAP strongholds, but its members have been able to
withdraw to remote, mountainous regions where they are protected by
local tribes wary of the government.
President Hadi has also been weakened by the Houthi rebels from the
northern province of Saada, who triggered a political crisis in
September when they overran security forces in the capital and forced
him to form technocratic government and reverse unpopular subsidy cuts.
The rebels were supposed to withdraw from Sanaa, but they have instead
expanded their presence in central and western Yemen, triggering fierce
clashes with AQAP and Sunni tribesmen.
Last week, a suicide bomb attack on Houthi supporters in Ibb left as many as 49 people dead.
Are you in the area? Have you been affected by recent events? You can email haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk with your experience.
Please include a telephone number if you are willing to be contacted by a BBC journalist.