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)

Mandela wows fans ahead of World Cup final

(Reuters) – Nelson Mandela attended the opening of Sunday’s World Cup final between Spain and Netherlands, thrilling fans and capping South Africa’s pride in staging a successful tournament.

Mandela, 91, who is in frail health, waved as he briefly toured the pitch in a golf cart surrounded by bodyguards. He was given an ecstatic welcome by the crowd chanting his clan name Madiba and blowing vuvuzela trumpets.

FIFA had said it hoped Mandela would attend but the former South Africa president, who celebrates his birthday on July 18, rarely appears in public and his grandson Mandla Mandela hinted the Nobel peace price winner would not attend the entire match.

“He’s going to rest and try and get some energy for tonight,” Mandla Mandela told Reuters ahead of the match, due to start at 1830 GMT at Soccer City on the edge of the sprawling black township of Soweto.

“He has expressed that he is coming to the stadium to come and greet the fans and go back home.”

Mandela missed the opening match of the tournament a month ago after his great-granddaughter died in a car accident.

South Africa’s military health service said Mandela’s visit was made possible after it had close consultations with his family and FIFA, world soccer’s governing body.

“At no stage was the health of Dr Mandela compromised and… members of the SA Military Health Service (were) on hand to ensure the wellbeing of Dr Mandela,” it said in a statement.

The presence of Mandela, revered globally for his role in fighting apartheid and leading his country to democracy, adds to South African joy at successfully hosting the first World Cup on the continent.

National team Bafana Bafana bowed out of the tournament at the first round stage but President Jacob Zuma said on Saturday the relatively smooth hosting of the finals made its people the champions.

Skeptics had doubted Africa’s economic powerhouse could organize the World Cup, including completing construction of stadiums on time.

While some tourists have been robbed, the world’s biggest sporting event has taken place largely peacefully, confounding fears of attacks on foreigners in a country with one of the world’s highest rates of violent crime outside a war zone.

(Additional reporting by Barry Moody; Editing by Ken Ferris)

Yemen rebels fire on military plane, breaching truce

Yemeni Shi’ite rebels opened fire on a military plane flying above the flashpoint city of Saada, officials said on Friday, in one of the most serious breaches yet of a truce to end a northern war.

The plane, likely carrying military and government officials, was not hit in the shooting, which took place on Thursday, one official said.

“An Antonov military plane came under fire by Houthi elements as it was flying over the city of Saada,” a member of a committee overseeing the truce said, referring to the rebels by the clan name of their leaders.

“The plane usually does routine trips to transport military and administrative leaders to the (Saada) province to carry out their work,” the committee member added, calling the shooting a serious violation of the ceasefire.

The government, struggling to stabilise a fractious country where al Qaeda is trying to strengthen its foothold, agreed a truce in February with the northern rebels to halt fighting that has raged on and off since 2004 and displaced 250,000 people.

Yemen jumped to the forefront of Western security concerns after al Qaeda’s Yemen-based regional arm claimed responsibility for an attempted attack on a U.S.-bound plane in December.

Western governments and Saudi Arabia fear that al Qaeda is exploiting instability in Yemen to use the Arabian peninsula state, strategically located next to the world’s biggest oil exporter, as a base for attacks in the region and beyond.

Last month, President Ali Abdullah Saleh, whose government is also trying to quell southern secessionists, declared the war in the north was over.

While the ceasefire has mostly held, previous truces have not lasted and analysts are sceptical whether this one will either, so long as Shi’ite complaints of discrimination by the state remain unaddressed.

(Reporting by Mohamed Sudam; writing by Cynthia Johnston; editing by Philippa Fletcher)

Mandla Mandela: a chip off the old block?

Mvezo, South Africa – When Mandla Mandela arrived in the home village of his grandfather Nelson 18 months ago to take up the position of “nkosi” (traditional leader), the locals just laughed – and wagered he’d be gone by the next day.

Instead he’s now a candidate for the country’s national parliament, following in his famous grandfather’s illustrious footsteps.

Draped in a lion skin, Mandla – a 35-year-old politics graduate – had been solemnly installed as chief of the Tembu clan at Mvezo, Mandela’s homestead in the Eastern Cape, six months beforehand.

But the people of Mvezo, an impoverished community of brightly- painted mud huts strewn across a cluster of bare hills, assumed he would run the show from afar.

“They laughed. They thought it was hilarious! They wondered how can Madiba’s ( Mandela’s clan name) grandson come and stay in such a remote village,” Mandla, who bears a striking resemblance to the iconic politician, with his towering physique, same slightly thick voice and easy banter, recalls.

But in coming to Mvezo, Mandla realized a dream of Mandela’s – to reclaim for the family the Tembu chieftaincy, which he renounced as a young man to devote himself to the anti-apartheid struggle.

And for Mandla, becoming nkosi also entailed painful sacrifices.

As a businessman in Johannesburg he ran two successful companies and drove a BMW. These days he sleeps in a single-roomed hut, drives a van and spends days sitting cross-legged on the stone floor of a tribal court, listening to villagers’ grievances.

But Mandla Mandela’s ambitions extend far beyond these hills, where Nelson used to herd cattle as a boy. His sights are set on parliament, where the African National Congress, of which his grandfather is still the figurehead, is only too happy to have a young Mandela in its ranks.

Next week, South Africans will vote in the fourth national and provincial elections since Mandela became the country’s first democratically-elected president in 1994.

In a corner of the court at Mvezo a stack of yellow, green and black posters urge “Vote ANC.”

Mandla is on the ANC’s list of candidates for parliament. His candidacy arose after he took his grandfather out to campaign for the current, controversial ANC leader, Jacob Zuma at a rally.

Mandla insists his selection was purely on the strength of his performance in Mvezo, where he is well-liked and hopes to remain chief, even if he becomes a lawmaker.

One of the key issues he has had to grapple with is HIV/AIDS, a pandemic that has ravaged rural communities like Mvezo, which have little or no access to healthcare.

“The Mandelas are not a family that have been left untouched by the epidemic,” Mandla notes. His own father, Nelson’s son Makgatho, died of AIDS in 2005, and he has several cousins living with HIV.

Mandla has persuaded mobile HIV testing units up the road to Mvezo, so that people can check their status and begin treatment if necessary.

On other issues, change has been slower. The expected date for electricity in the area is only 2011 and poverty is so acute one young villager said she had deliberately infected herself with HIV so she could collect a small stipend for the sick.

Some South Africans now blame the slow pace of post-apartheid transformation on corruption in the ANC and accuse it of betraying Mandela’s legacy. Zuma himself has been dogged by suspicion of corruption in an arms deal.

But Mandla holds the previous administration of Thabo Mbeki chiefly responsible for the sense of alienation between the government and the electorate.

“We found ourselves in an era where leadership had become detached from its own members.” he says. “This era (of Zuma’s ANC leadership) is bringing us back to the masses,” he says, claiming Nelson Mandela is one of Zuma’s fans.

If there is cause for concern, he says, it’s over the country’s deteriorating human rights record.

The government of caretaker-president Kgalema Motlanthe, who has been keeping the seat warm for Zuma since Mbeki was ousted last year, attracted widespread condemnation last month for denying the Dalai Lama a visa, following diplomatic pressure from China.

“His rejection of a visa for me broke the very essence of who we are as a country,” according to Mandla. “Although we are a poverty- stricken nation that is seeking for investment, we need not compromise our identity. We need not sell out who we are.” (dpa)