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Forensic experts inspect the site of a damaged bus after a bomb attack in Sanaa, Yemen, Monday, Sept. 9, 2013. Two bombs targeting buses carrying military, exploded, causing no injuries. Image Credit: AP

Sana’a: At least 42 people have been killed in 10 days of clashes in Yemen between Sunni Islamists and Houthi rebels, tribal sources and an official said on Monday.

Tension is mounting with stumbling national reconciliation talks, begun after the ouster of former president Ali Abdullah Saleh last year, set to conclude this month.

There have been days of clashes between gunmen loyal to tribal chief Hamid Al Ahmar - a leader of the Sunni Islah party, and Shiite Huthi rebels in Amran province north of the capital, several sources said.

More than 30 people have been killed in the past 10 days in fighting in Osaymat and Ozur, a tribal chief said of two areas named after the tribes who live there.

At least 12 others were killed in firefights between Huthis and Sunni Islamists in the Rudma region near Ibb, a local official said.

The Huthis’ Ansaruallah website accused Ahmar and his Islah party of sending scores of gunmen to Amran and Ibb.