Apr 03, 2012
Islamist militants have claimed
responsibility for blowing up an oil pipeline in Yemen late on Monday, the
second such attack in four days launched in revenge for a US drone strike that
killed five suspected al Qaeda militants.
Monday's blast set fire to a
pipeline that transports oil from the southern province of Shabwa to the Bir
Ali terminal on the Gulf of Aden, an industry official said. Friday's
explosion, which, shut the Yemen LNG terminal at the nearby Balhaf port, came
hours after the missile strike on the militants' car.
Ansar al-Sharia, an armed group
affiliated to Qaeda, said in a text message on Tuesday that the latest pipeline
explosion was part of "a chain of attacks" planned in response to the
US strike.
Yemen's oil and gas pipelines have
been repeatedly sabotaged since anti-government protests last year created a
power vacuum that militants have exploited. Al Qaeda has strengthened its hold
on southern areas of the country after the uprising against former President Ali
Abdullah Saleh.
Yemen is only a small crude oil
producer but it has the capacity to supply up to 6.7 million tonne of LNG a
year. Yemen LNG, one of the world's top 20 liquefied gas suppliers, shipped
most of its production to Asia the latest available data shows, with the rest
going to the Americas and Europe. The company delivers under long term
contracts to GDF Suez, Total and Korea Gas Corp.
In the capital, Sanaa, President
Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi on Tuesday met with a military committee tasked with restructuring
the armed forces, which is riven with divisions between units controlled by
Saleh's relatives, those of a rebel general, and tribal militias in the
capital.
The committee has struggled to
enforce the dismantling of checkpoints erected in Sanaa by renegade general Ali
Mohsen al-Ahmar and pro-Saleh troops and open fighting broke out in the capital
last year between armed factions.
"The committee still has
certain tasks that it has to fulfill to achieve stability, open roads that are
being closed and protect power plants and oil and gas pipelines," Hadi
said on Tuesday, according to state news agency, Saba.
In a separate incident, security
forces defused a bomb near a police station in Aden's Mansoura neighbourhood, a
security official told Reuters, without giving further details.
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