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Masked assailants set church ablaze in Yemen's Aden

Suspected al-Qaeda militants torched St Joseph Roman Catholic church
A picture taken on 22 March 2015, shows a Roman Catholic church in the Tawahi district in the southern Yemeni city of Aden (AFP)

Unidentified assailants set ablaze one of the few churches in Yemen's second city Aden on Wednesday, a day after it had been damaged by vandals, witnesses said.

The masked arsonists torched St Joseph, a Roman Catholic church in the central Crater neighbourhood of the port city, which is controlled by loyalists of the exiled government.

A security official said the attackers could be militants of al-Qaeda. 

"The church is in flames," resident Moetaz al-Maysour told AFP, adding that "masked men started the fire".

Yemen's population is 99 percent Muslim.

Of the 22 churches that operated in Aden when the city was a British colony before 1967, only a few remain open, used rarely by foreign workers and African refugees. 

The militant network's Yemen branch, regarded by Washington as its deadliest, has exploited the fighting to boost its presence in swathes of the south and east.

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