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Suspected al-Qaeda bombers strike police building in Saudi Arabia

On the run after an attack at the Yemen-Saudi border, 2 suspected militants blew themselves up in a Saudi Arabian intelligence compound
Yemen's troops have pledged to 'purge' al-Qaeda from southern parts of the country (AFP)
Two al-Qaeda militants who gained access to a police intelligence building in southern Saudi Arabia have reportedly blown themselves up early Saturday, according to Saudi state media reports.

The suicide bombing at the intelligence compound in the southern province of Sharurah follows an attack late Friday on the Saudi Arabia-Yemen border which killed a Saudi security officer and a Yemeni soldier

The Saudi Arabian interior ministry in Riyadh said a border security patrol came under fire near the Wadia post in Sharurah, killing the unit's chief.

Security forces gave chase, killing three of the attackers, while a fourth was wounded and captured, a ministry spokesman said.

Late Friday, the spokesman, quoted by state news agency SPA, said one or two suspects were on the run, without identifying the assailants.

It is apparently these two suspects who then blew up the police intelligence building early Saturday after what Saudi-owned al-Arabia television said was fierce fighting with security forces.

In Yemen, a security source suspected al-Qaeda gunmen attacked a military post on the border, triggering a clash that killed one Yemeni soldier and wounded another.

The assailants used machineguns and rocket-propelled grenades to attack the Yemeni side of the Wadia post, the source said, adding that the gunmen managed to flee.

The crossing is in Yemen's southeastern province of Hadramawt, whose rugged terrain provides hideouts for militants of al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.

AQAP, born in 2009 of a fusion of the Saudi and Yemeni branches of al-Qaeda, is considered by Washington to be the militant network's most dangerous affiliate.

Local Yemeni officials told AFP that Friday's attack bore "the thumbprints of al-Qaeda" without elaborating.

Apart from infiltrators, smugglers do a brisk business across the long and porous border between oil-rich Saudi Arabia and impoverished Yemen.

To counter illegal crossings and arms smuggling, Saudi Arabia is building a three-metre (10-foot) high fence along its southern frontier.

Taking advantage of a collapse of central authority during a 2011 uprising that forced Yemen's veteran strongman Ali Abdullah Saleh from power, al-Qaeda seized swathes of the country's south and east.

Saudi Arabia launched a massive crackdown on al-Qaeda following a spate of deadly attacks in the kingdom from 2003-2006

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