A car bomb tore through dozens of Yemenis lined up at a police academy in Sanaa on Wednesday, killing more than 30 in the latest attack highlighting the country's growing instability.
Police said at least 33 people had died and 62 were wounded in what it described as a "terrorist bombing" targeting potential police recruits, in a statement cited by the official Saba news agency.
Unstable and impoverished Yemen has been hit by a wave of violence in recent months, with a powerful Shiite militia, known as Huthis, clashing with tribal forces and the country's branch of al-Qaida.
Witness Khaled Ajlan said the early morning blast targeted dozens of "new students who were registering at the police academy".
The charred remains of the dead, mostly young men, were piled on the sidewalk outside the academy alongside blood-soaked documents they had been carrying.
The wreckage of a car sat nearby, with little remaining but mangled metal and the steering wheel, one of several cars that were still burning by midday.
A security official told AFP the bomb was in a minibus, of which only scraps of metal remained.
Rescue workers loaded bodies into ambulances, which pushed their way through gathered onlookers, many taking pictures of the carnage with their mobile telephones.
The health ministry urged Sanaa residents to "donate blood at government hospitals to help the wounded".
It was not immediately clear who was behind the blast but al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), the jihadist network's powerful affiliate in Yemen, has claimed responsibility for previous attacks on security forces.
Speaking to AFP at the scene, a member of the unofficial Huthi security forces blamed "radicals belonging to al-Qaida" for the attack.
And a Huthi statement denounced "this despicable crime," whose perpetrators "will not go unpunished."
The interior ministry said registration at the academy would be suspended for a week.
Many of the potential recruits had traveled from other parts of the country to the academy. The ministry said that, in future, it would register them locally to avoid another such gatherings being targeted.
Yemen has been dogged by instability since an uprising forced longtime strongman Ali Abdullah Saleh from power in 2012.
Unrest grew after the Huthis, also known as Ansarullah, overran Sanaa unopposed on September 21.
The militia, who already control northern parts of the country, have since expanded their presence in central and western Yemen, meeting fierce resistance from Sunni tribes and al-Qaida militants.
The increasing violence has raised fears that Yemen, which shares a long border with oil-rich Saudi Arabia, might become a failed state.
AQAP, considered by the United States to be al-Qaida's most dangerous branch, has pledged to fight the Huthis.
Yemen is an ally of the United States in its fight against the jihadist network, allowing Washington to carry out a longstanding drone war on its territory against AQAP.
A suicide bomb attack on Huthi supporters in central Yemen last week killed 49 people.
Four people, including a reporter, were killed Sunday in another blast targeting a gathering of Huthis in southwestern Yemen, while six militiamen were wounded in a blast in Sanaa on Monday.
Meanwhile, two tribal dignitaries and four of their escorts were killed in an ambush by unknown gunmen in central Yemen Tuesday, Saba said.
Saleh's General People's Congress party said the pair were among its leading figures, and it condemned the attack.
President Abdrabuh Mansur Hadi has struggled to assert his authority since the Huthi takeover of the capital.
Hadi condemned the attack and said Wednesday that a recent meeting between a delegation he dispatched to the Shiite militia stronghold Saada and the group's chief, Abdulmalik al-Huthi, was "positive."
Political sources said the sides discussed plans for turning Yemen into a federal state of six regions, which were announced a year ago. That proposal was rejected at the time by the Shiite militia, which demanded a two-region federation.
Also on Wednesday, Hadi received a draft copy of the future federal state's constitution, which was finalized by a specialized committee during a series of recent meetings in the United Arab Emirates and Germany, said Saba.
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