Three "terrorists" were killed Sunday in clashes at a checkpoint near Yemen's presidential palace, two days after a suspected al-Qaida attack on the same post killed five guards, the interior ministry said.
A civilian was also killed in the gunfight which erupted at dawn after gunmen attacked the presidential guard checkpoint near Misbahi roundabout, around 500 meters (yards) from the palace, a statement said.
Authorities use the term "terrorists" to refer to al-Qaida militants in the impoverished Arab country, where an army offensive against jihadist strongholds has been underway since April 29.
Sanaa has been on alert for days, and tensions rose after the army said troops had entered Azzan, a jihadist bastion in southern Shabwa province, prompting the United States to close its Sanaa embassy on Thursday.
On Friday five guards were killed in clashes that broke out after gunmen attacked the checkpoint outside the republican palace in Sanaa which the president -- who was not there at the time -- only uses for meeting.
That attack came hours after the defense minister, who has vowed to crush jihadists active in Yemen, survived an ambush by suspected Al-Qaida militants in the south of the country.
Yemen's army says its offensive against al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula strongholds in the contiguous provinces of Shabwa, Abyan and Baida has inflicted heavy losses on the jihadists.
AQAP is considered by Washington as the most dangerous affiliate of al-Qaida and has been linked to failed terror plots in the United States.
The jihadists took advantage of an Arab Spring-inspired uprising that forced autocratic president Ali Abdullah Saleh from power to seize large swathes of southern and eastern Yemen.
The army recaptured several major towns in 2012 but has struggled to reassert control in rural areas, despite the backing of tribal militiamen.
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