Shiite Rebels Wound 17 Yemen Police in Ambush

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Seventeen Yemeni policemen were wounded in an ambush by Shiite Huthis as fighting between government forces and the rebels neared the capital, officials said on Sunday.

The Huthis -- also known as Ansarullah -- have advanced out of their northern mountain strongholds towards Sanaa in a suspected attempt to expand their sphere of influence as Yemen is reorganized into six regions.

"Armed militants belonging to the Ansarullah Huthi (rebels) opened fire at security patrols carrying out their duties in the capital" on Saturday, state news agency Saba said.

Militants blocked a road in Sanaa's al-Jarraf district, where the rebels have a representative office near the interior ministry, and fired on police patrols from surrounding buildings.

Seventeen policemen, including three officers, were wounded, Saba added.

Security officials told Agence France Presse the incident took place after authorities arrested two wanted rebels and tried to detain others.

Ansarullah said in a statement security forces "targeted" the rebels' Sanaa office to "ignite a meaningless war."

On Saturday, hundreds of Yemenis protested outside the presidential residence over what they say is the authorities' inaction over the rebel advance.

Fighting between troops and rebels neared Sanaa on Friday, with clashes reaching the town of Bani Matar, only 15 kilometers (nine miles) northwest of the capital, tribal and security sources said.

The sources said that "dozens" have been killed, but were unable to provide a precise toll.

Military officials said warplanes have pounded rebel positions over the past two days, destroying an arms depot in the northern town of Hamdan, while reinforcements have been deployed around Sanaa.

A new round of clashes with rebels erupted in Yemen's north a week ago, ending an 11-day truce agreed after mediation backed by United Nations envoy Jamal Benomar.

Huthis have been battling the central government for years from their Saada heartland, complaining of marginalization under former president Ali Abdullah Saleh, who stepped down in 2012 after a year-long uprising.

The rebels said a federalization plan agreed in February following national talks as part of a political transition would divide Yemen into rich and poor regions.

They seized areas of Amran province in fighting with tribes in February that killed more than 150 people.

In addition to the Shiite rebellion, the government is also facing a southern separatist movement and an al-Qaida insurgency.

Members of the security forces, particularly officers, are frequently targeted in attacks.

On Sunday, an administrative official and a policeman were killed in the south in two separate attacks blamed on al-Qaida, a security source said.

A day earlier, gunmen killed General Abdullah al-Mehdar, an instructor at Yemen's military academy, as he was leaving a mosque in Sanaa.

Al-Qaida militants are usually blamed for such hit-and-run attacks. But members of the network have never admitted responsibility for the assaults.

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