Yemeni tribe, Shi’ite rebels fight as truce broken

SANAA, July 25 (Reuters) – Fighting broke out on Sunday between a pro-government tribe and Shi’ite rebels in Yemen, hours after the two sides agreed to a truce following battles last week which threatened to re-ignite a civil war.

Tribal leader Sheikh Saghir Ibn Aziz blamed the rebels, named Houthis after the clan name of their leaders, for the renewed fighting after clashes killed up to 70 people last week.

“The Houthis did not respect the agreement and attacked us. We responded,” he told Reuters by telephone.

Al Arabiya television said the latest fighting, which it said killed four rebels, broke out after the tribesmen did not withdraw from a position as demanded by the rebels, who said it was part of the truce accords.

There was no immediate comment by the rebels on their website.

Last week’s fighting, in which government forces were also involved, was the bloodiest in the north since a truce in February ended a war between the state and the rebels that has raged intermittently since 2004 and last year drew in neighbouring Saudi Arabia.

Earlier on Sunday, Yemen’s President Ali Abdullah Saleh called for a permanent end to fighting in the north, especially in Saada province, the rebels’ stronghold.

“Six wars are enough. Yes to security, stability and peace in Saada. No to the latest war,” Saleh said in remarks carried by regional television stations.

Yemen’s Western and Saudi allies want Sanaa, also trying to quell southern separatism, to resolve domestic conflicts such as the northern war so it can focus on fighting a resurgent regional arm of al Qaeda, seen as a bigger international threat.

Tension between the rebels and the Ibn Aziz tribe, from the same Zaidi sect of Shi’ite Islam but which sided with the state during the civil war, has been growing for months.

The tension exploded into violence after rebels attacked Sheikh Saghir’s home in early July, killing three of his followers. Clashes broke out again last week, prompting government forces to intervene to assist the tribe. Five government soldiers were among those killed.

Qatar has offered to revive a 2008 peace deal it brokered between Sanaa and the rebels to end the war, which displaced 350,000 people. (Reporting by Mohammed Ghobari; Writing by Cynthia Johnston and Firouz Sedarat)

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Bahrain sacks minister in money laundering probe

A Bahraini state minister said on Monday he had been dismissed, following accusations of money laundering which he denied.

The Gulf Arab state’s King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa issued a decree dismissing the minister, Mansour bin Rajab, without giving a reason, the Bahraini daily al-Wasat said on its website.

Bin Rajab, a minister of state without portfolio, confirmed his dismissal but denied the accusations.

“My dismissal is perhaps aimed at facilitating the ongoing investigation,” bin Rajab said in a telephone interview with Al Arabiya television.

“I have the right to defend myself … and the accusations are completely untrue,” he said.

Police earlier said an official had been detained for questioning, without naming him. Local media identified the official as bin Rajab and said he had been released for health reasons after questioning.

“An official has been detained on charges of committing money laundering transactions domestically and abroad,” a police statement said.

“The ministry (of interior) noticed the events in early 2009, and therefore monitored the official’s activities, meetings and communications closely and secretly,” it added, without saying how much money was involved.

Bin Rajab was earlier quoted by Gulf Daily News as saying that prosecutors “merely asked about issues relating to (his) ministry and employees”.

Bahrain, which hosts the regional headquarters of anti-money laundering watchdog Financial Action Task Force, issued an anti-money laundering law in 2001 but until now there had been no such high-profile investigations or arrests among senior officials.

(Reporting by Rania Oteify and Firouz Sedarat)