Yemen vows to track down kidnappers of Italian

DUBAI, July 30 (Reuters) - Yemen's foreign minister has

vowed to do everything possible to track down the kidnappers of

an Italian embassy security officer and obtain his safe release,

state news agency Saba said.

Gunmen seized the security officer near the Italian embassy

in the capital Sanaa on Sunday, Yemeni security sources told

Reuters. No information has been revealed so far on the identity

of the kidnappers.

In a phone call with Italian Foreign Minister Giulio Terzi

Di Santagata, Yemeni Foreign Minister Abubakr al-Qirbi said the

hunt for the kidnappers had begun, Saba reported late on Sunday.

A spokesman for the Italian Foreign Ministry in Rome said a

security officer who was a member of the country's Carabinieri

military police had been seized in Yemen and that a crisis

committee had been activated.

The abduction followed the kidnapping in March of the Saudi

deputy consul in Yemen's port city of Aden, Abdallah al-Khalidi,

by al Qaeda-linked militants. The kidnappers have demanded the

release of women detainees held in Saudi prisons.

Disgruntled tribesmen also often kidnap foreigners and bomb

oil and gas pipelines as a way to press demands on authorities.

Earlier on Sunday, about 100 armed tribesmen loyal to former

president Ali Abdullah Saleh stormed the Interior Ministry,

demanding to be enlisted in the police force, officials said.

The incidents on Sunday highlighted the continuing turmoil

in Yemen despite a peace deal under which Saleh stood down after

months of protests against his 33-year rule and was replaced in

February by his deputy, Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi.

(Reporting by Mohammed Ghobari; Writing by Mirna Sleiman;

Editing by Pravin Char)