Photo: AFP
Security forces set up a road block in the city of Aden, 19 June, 2010, after insurgents attacked a Yemeni intelligence headquarters in this southern port city
Insurgents,  possibly belonging to al-Qaida, attacked the main Yemeni police  intelligence headquarters in the Southern Yemeni capital of Aden  Saturday, killing at least 11 people and wounding at least nine others.  Eyewitnesses report that a number of prisoners were also set free during  the bloody shootout.
Insurgents wearing military uniforms stormed the main gate of the Yemeni  police intelligence compound in the city of Aden Saturday, causing  numerous casualties and embarrassing the government.
Eyewitnesses say the attackers fired assault weapons, mortars and  grenades at those guarding the building, as well as employees and  civilians inside the compound. The bloody shootout lasted for over an  hour and set fire to parts of the building.
Yemeni government TV said that the attackers freed a number of  prisoners. Police in Aden set up roadblocks all across the old city  after the insurgents withdrew.
Yemeni security forces have stepped up attacks against southern  separatist rebels, as well as al-Qaida militants, during the past month,  causing numerous casualties among their ranks, as well as among  civilians, according to some sources.
Yemen Post newspaper editor-in-chief Hakim Almasmari says that  facial features of the assailants reveal that they were southerners, but  he argues it is still not clear if they were separatists or al-Qaida  militants. Al-Qaida, he points out, announced Friday that it would  retaliate for government attacks against it in eastern Yemen.
"Al-Qaida last night announced that they will attack because of  [government raids on its militants] in Maarib over the past month. The  government killed many in Maarib, and many of those who were killed were  also civilians, even though seven al-Qaida [militants] were killed. So,  al-Qaida [was] on the verge of retaliation," said Almasmari.
Southern tribesmen in Maarib also recently blew up a key oil pipeline  after a government airstrike accidentally killed an official trying to  mediate with al-Qaida militants in the region.
Al-Qaida militants have attacked Yemeni police headquarters in the  capital Sana'a, several times, in recent years, freeing a number of  prisoners. Hakim Almasmari, however, insists that Saturday's attack in  Aden was by far the biggest and most embarrassing for the government.
"This is massive," he said. "This is much, much bigger than what  happened last year [in Sana'a]. This attack is very, very massive and  the death toll is very high. The government has even fired the two main  political security officials in Aden. They were fired early in the  morning [Saturday]. So, the government is surprised that they were able  to enter the [southern] capital and also they're questioning other  officials inside the public security to see if they aided the  attackers."
Yemen has prompted increasing concerns among Western governments, as  al-Qaida militants and southern separatists wage battle against the  central government in Sana'a. Both threats follow a protracted rebellion  by Zaidi shi'ite rebels in the northern Saada province, last year.
 
