Yemen defence minister survives suicide attack

 ADEN, Yemen, (Reuters) – Yemen’s defence minister  survived an attack on his convoy today, narrowly escaping  death for the second time in a month, when a suicide bomber blew  himself up in a car in the southern city of Aden, officials  said.   
 The blast, which a security official suspected was the work  of al Qaeda, wounded seven soldiers in the lead vehicle of the  ministerial motorcade. But Defence Minister Mohammed Nasser Ali,  riding in the second car, was unharmed, a local official said.   
 Having initially thought the blast was set off remotely,  investigators found the body of a 19-year-old inside the car  which exploded and concluded he was a suicide bomber. A security  official said the attack was consistent with al Qaeda’s tactics.   
 Residents in the area saw two cars ablaze and clouds of  smoke where the attack took place.   
 Since popular protests against President Ali Abdullah Saleh  paralysed impoverished Yemen earlier this year, Islamist  militants suspected of links to al Qaeda have tightened their  grip on the south, seizing several towns and targeting troops  and security officials.   
 International powers fear growing lawlessness in Yemen could  embolden al Qaeda’s local wing and imperil shipping routes. Aden  lies close to the Bab al-Mandab strait, through which some 3  million barrels of oil pass daily.   
 The defence minister survived when his convoy drove over a  landmine on Aug. 30 in the southern province of Abyan, which  neighbours Aden. Two of his bodyguards were killed.