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Death toll in Yemen goes beyond 40 in Sunni-Shia clashes in Sanaa


SANAA: At least 40 people have been killed in three days of fighting between Shi’ite Muslim rebels and Sunni tribesmen, sources on both sides said on Sunday, as sectarian fighting that flared up in October in the north drew closer to the capital Sanaa. Fighters loyal to the Shi’ite Houthi tribe, who have repeatedly fought government forces since 2004, are trying to tighten their grip on the north as Yemen - home to one of Al Qaeda’s most active branches - moves towards a federal system that gives more power to regional authorities. Gulf Arab states and the United States are particularly concerned about violence in the Western-allied country as it shares a long border with top oil exporter Saudi Arabia and its coast runs alongside Red Sea and Gulf of Aden shipping lanes.

Fighting on Friday and Saturday in al-Jawf province, about 140 kms (90 miles) north-east of Sanaa, claimed more than 30 lives before government mediators managed to broker a truce. And clashes on Sunday in Hamdan, an area some 30 km north-west of Sanaa has killed more than 10, officials on both sides said. Fighting is still going on, they said. The Houthis - who control much of the northern Saada province bordering Saudi Arabia and next to al-Jawf - also blew up a three-storey Sunni religious education centre in Hamdan on Sunday, local tribal sources said. A local official called on government mediators to try to stop the fighting and warned in a statement carried by Yemeni media that failure to do so would result in a ‘bloodbath’.
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