September 2006 Yemen attacks

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September 2006 Yemen attacks
Location
militants, possibly Al-Qaeda

The September 2006 Yemen attacks were two attempted bombings of oil facilities in

militants
on September 15, 2006. All four attackers and one security guard died during the attacks.

Background

There had been fears of an impending terrorist attack in Yemen since February 2006, when 23

Al Qaeda prisoners escaped from a Yemeni prison. The September 15th attacks came just before the country's presidential elections. Only days before the attacks, Al Qaeda's second in command, Ayman al-Zawahiri, issued a videotaped threat of attacks on the Persian Gulf and on facilities he blamed for stealing Muslim oil; analysts point to Al Qaeda as the likely perpetrator of the attacks.[1]

Dubba Port attack

At 5:15 am local time, two attempted

Interior Ministry
, the driver of the car was wearing a uniform similar to those worn by staff at the facility, and the second driver was dressed in a military uniform. The guards at the port managed to detonate the vehicles before it reached its target. In the resulting blast, one security guard was killed.

Mareb attack

At 5:50 am, 35 minutes after the first attack, security guards at a

Mareb
blew up two cars loaded with explosives. The Interior Ministry statement reported that the vehicles, which were similar to those driven by the facility's staff, ". . . were driven by other suicide bomber terrorists who tried to break into [the facility]". The two attackers were killed; no one else was injured in the attack.

Perpetrators

On November 7, 2007, a Yemeni court sentenced 32 men to between two and 15 years in prison after they were found guilty of supporting the attacks. The men had pleaded not guilty.[2]

Footnotes

  1. ^ "Suicide bombers foiled in Yemen attack" (Link dead as of 15 January 2007)
  2. ^ "BBC NEWS | World | Middle East | Yemen jails 32 men for oil attack". news.bbc.co.uk. 7 November 2007. Retrieved 2016-09-26.

External links