Car bomb kills 37 at Yemen police academy

At least 37 people have been killed and dozens more injured following a car bomb attack on a police academy in Yemen.

Policemen stand next to wreckage at the scene of a car bombing

At least 37 people have been killed and dozens more injured following a car bomb attack in Yemen. (AAP)

A car bomb has torn through dozens of Yemenis lined up at a police academy in Sanaa, killing 37 people.

Police said another 66 people were wounded in what it described as a "terrorist bombing" targeting potential police recruits, in a statement cited by the official Saba news agency.

Unstable and impoverished Yemen has been hit by a wave of violence in recent months, with a powerful Shi'ite militia, known as Huthis, clashing with Sunni tribal forces and the country's branch of Al-Qaeda.

Witness Khaled Ajlan said the early morning blast targeted dozens of "new students who were registering at the police academy".

The charred remains of the dead, mostly young men, were piled on the footpath outside the academy alongside blood-soaked documents they had been carrying.

A security official told AFP the bomb was in a minibus, of which only scraps of metal remained.

The health ministry urged Sanaa residents to "donate blood at government hospitals to help the wounded".

It was not immediately clear who was behind the blast but Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), the jihadist network's powerful affiliate in Yemen, has claimed responsibility for previous attacks on security forces.

Speaking to AFP at the scene, a member of the unofficial Huthi security forces blamed "radicals belonging to Al-Qaeda" for the attack.

And a Huthi statement denounced "this despicable crime," whose perpetrators "will not go unpunished".

The interior ministry said registration at the academy would be suspended for a week.

Many of the potential recruits had travelled from other parts of the country to the academy. The ministry said that, in future, it would register them locally to avoid another such gathering being targeted.


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Source: AAP



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