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epa03737466 Yemeni men shout slogans and hold posters of relatives and fellows, allegedly detained by the Shiite al-Houthi movement, during a rally in Sana’a, Yemen, 09 June 2013. Reports state Yemeni protesters accused the Yemeni Shiite al-Houthi movement of disappearing forcibly scores of soldiers and pro-government people during a six-year brutal conflict between government forces and the Iran-backed Houthi militants in the northern province of Saada. EPA/YAHYA ARHAB Image Credit: EPA

Sana’a, Yemen: Clashes between Shiite protesters and security forces in Yemen’s capital Sunday killed one protester and wounded 10 people, including four guards, a Yemeni security official said.

The violent protest and persistent clashes in the south with Al Qaida forces showed that nearly a year and a half after a new government took office, Yemen is still struggling for stability.

The Shiite protesters were demanding the release of political detainees. The official said they fired at guards while trying to storm intelligence headquarters in Sana’a.

He said some of the detainees were arrested for smuggling weapons and drugs. He spoke on condition of anonymity according to regulations.

Also in the capital, hundreds of supporters of former president Ali Abdullah Saleh demonstrated against the release of 17 men who were detained in connection with a June 2011 explosion that injured Saleh in his palace mosque. Saleh stepped down last year after months of protests.

The prosecutor’s office said the 17 were released for lack of evidence.

In another part of the country, a military official said an airstrike Sunday, believed to be a US drone attack, killed five suspected Al Qaida militants in the eastern province of Al Jawf, bordering Saudi Arabia.

The official said two missiles were fired at two cars carrying the militants in the Al Mahashma area in Al Jawf, a militant hotbed.

A US airstrike in Al Jawf in 2011 killed two US-born Al Qaida activists - cleric Anwar Al Awlaki and Samir Khan, who edited Al Qaida’s Internet magazine.

In the southern province of Hadramawt, one soldier was killed and three others injured in an ambush by Al Qaida militants on Sunday, a military official said.

He said the army, backed by warplanes, pressed its operation against Al Qaida in Hadramawt, killing two militants, bringing to nine the number of fighters killed since the start of the offensive on Wednesday. He said 15 suspected militants were arrested while four soldiers, including an officer, were killed in the fighting.

Both officials spoke on condition of anonymity according to military rules.

The unusually large operation in Hadramawt followed efforts by Yemen’s new government to force remaining Al Qaida militants out of strongholds captured during a year of political turmoil in Yemen that ended with the replacement of Salah early last year by his vice president, Abd Rabbo Mansour Hadi.

Washington considers the Yemen branch, also known as the Al Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, as one of the world’s most dangerous terror groups.