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Reports: Blast hits Yemen, several dead

  • Story Highlights
  • Explosion rocks entrance of a Yemeni city, witnesses tell CNN
  • Estimates of the number of dead so far range from eight to 15
  • Government officials: Motorcycle used for attack at the entrance of a mosque
  • U.S.: Yemen has severe security issues, evacuated non-essential diplomatic staff
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From CNN's Samson Desta in Dubai
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(CNN) -- An explosion rocked the entrance of a Yemeni city on Friday, causing several deaths and injuries, witnesses told CNN.

art.sanaa.yemen.afp.gi.jpg

The attack happened 150 miles north of the Yemeni capital Sanaa, pictured above.

The attack occurred in Saada, nearly 150 miles (240 kilometers) north of the country's capital, Sanaa.

A security official at a hospital said 13 people have died and 45 others wounded. The Yemeni News Agency also is reporting that same figure.

The Associated Press reported another security official as stating that at least eight people had been slain. Other witnesses claim at least 15 people have died.

Yemeni government officials said a motorcycle was used to carry out an attack at the entrance of a mosque that targeted an imam and dozens were injured.

One official, speaking on condition of anonymity as he was not authorized to comment to media, said that many of the dead and injured were leaving Friday prayers at the Bin Salman mosque, The Associated Press reported, when the bomb exploded in a stationary car.

"I saw crowds of people and two charred vehicles -- I think one of them was the car bomb," Mohammed Abdel Bari, a worshipper, told AP. "I saw scores of people laying on the ground."

The region has been riven with violence since a Shiite Muslim rebellion in June 2004, with thousands killed in the ensuing conflict. The insurgents, now led by Abdel-Malek al-Hawthi, are critical of the authorities and their alliance with the West and the U.S. in particular.

The attack came 24 hours after the military blamed insurgents for killing seven soldiers, AP, added, sparking extra troop deployments in the region even before Friday's explosion.

In addition to the rebellion, security forces have also had to contend with attacks by al Qaeda -- the nation is the ancestral home of Osama bin Laden -- on foreigners.

Last month the U.S. embassy ordered all non-emergency staff to leave the country, one day after a rocket attack on a compound that houses Western and other international oil workers. It also followed attacks that have targeted the embassy over the last two years

And earlier this week a U.S. State Department report called Yemen's counterterrorism efforts in 2007 as "mixed" with "significant setbacks," including releasing all returned Guantanamo detainees and instituting a surrender program for terrorists with "lenient requirements."

It also criticized Yemen's weak counterterrorism laws and an "ineffective" justice system. E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend

Copyright 2008 CNN. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Associated Press contributed to this report.

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