The National - News

DREAMS LOST TO ISIL BOMBER

Death toll after car bomb attack at makeshift recruitmen­t centre in Aden rises to 74 and more than 100 injured

- Mohammed Al Qalisi Foreign Correspond­ent foreign.desk@thenationa­l.ae

Explosion hits friends, who hoped to join the Yemen army, before they can sign,

ADEN // Omar Abdulmoeen woke early with his three friends to make the two-hour journey to Aden.

The four men had been fighting in a resistance militia in Abyan province in support of the government, first against the rebel Houthi militants trying to take over the country and then against extremist groups attempting to seize territory amid the chaos of the civil war.

On Monday, they arrived in Aden to sign up for the Yemeni army at a school being used as a recruitmen­t centre. The men were among about 200 applicants from Aden and the surroundin­g provinces lining up to collect their recruitmen­t forms. Omar and his friends would have chatted excitedly about the prospect of becoming profession­al soldiers.

At 8.10am, those dreams were shattered when an ISIL suicide bomber drove a pickup truck into the gathered recruits and detonated explosives. Omar’s friends were among the dozens killed immediatel­y. The 24- year- old survived but was struck by several pieces of shrapnel. The corpses of dozens of young men surrounded him, but Omar remembers little about the aftermath.

“I wish that I was killed,” Omar told The National from his bed at the Republican Hospital where many of the injured were being treated yesterday.

“There is shrapnel in my legs and chest and I need several operations to take them away.” Like many young men in Southern Yemen, Omar joined a resistance group in Abyan’s Ahwar district after the Iranbacked Houthis and forces loyal to the deposed president Ali Abdullah Saleh surged across the country after seizing the capital, Sanaa, in 2014.

The militia’s leader had encouraged Omar to come to Aden to join the army. “When we arrived at the school, we still were waiting for the forms when the suicide bomber drove up,” he said.

Omar was in deep shock, distraught at losing his friends and overwhelme­d by the pain of his wounds. But he vowed he would still join the army when he had recovered to “fight the terrorists who killed my friends”.

Doctors at the hospital said the death toll from the bombing had risen to 74 yesterday, and about 100 people were being treated for injuries. Many had lost limbs.

Faisal Mohammed Salem, 19, from Aden, lost his left leg in the bombing.

“I am happy that I survived. When I see the photos of the attack, I cannot believe how I survived the attack,” Mr Salem told The National. “After losing my leg, there is no way I can join the army now.”

He said he hoped the security forces would catch and punish those behind the attack. Mr Salem’s father, Mohammed, 54, was angry at the lack of security at the recruitmen­t centre.

“There is carelessne­ss by the security forces,” he said as he sat near his son’s hospital bed. “This is the second time that the terrorists targeted applicants for recruitmen­t in the same way, and they did nothing to prevent it.”

He said the Yemeni government, which is using Aden as a temporary capital, should take responsibi­lity for the attack.

Since Aden was liberated from the Houthis with the help of a Saudi-led coalition last year, Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula and groups pledging allegiance to ISIL have carried out a series of assassinat­ions and suicide bombings.

Yemeni forces and the coalition, which includes the UAE, have launched operations against the extremists to drive them from key towns and cities.

Dr Ali Abdullah Saleh, manager of the Republican Hospital, said he was shocked when the dead and injured started to arrive at the hospital.

“Most of the wounds were severe, and many of them died in the hospital,” he said. “The injured suffered mostly from shrapnel wounds.”

He said the hospital was in a state of emergency and that it had appealed for blood donations and any available doctors to come and help.

The recruits’ deaths came as the conflict between the government and the Houthi rebels intensifie­d after the breakdown of peace talks this month.

Yesterday the United Nations said at least 10,000 people had been killed since the war escalated in March last year, almost double the estimates of more than 6,000 used previously.

UN humanitari­an coordinato­r Jamie McGoldrick said the conflict had displaced three million Yemenis and forced 200,000 people abroad.

I wish that I was killed Omar Abdulmoeen injured Yemen army recruit

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