The Borneo Post

Yemen talks falter after rebels no-show

- September 9, 2018

GENEVA: Long awaited UNbacked talks between Yemen’s warring parties sputtered out Saturday before ever truly starting, after the Huthi rebels refused to travel to Geneva and fresh fighting broke out on the ground.

UN envoy Martin Griffiths said he had held ‘fruitful consultati­ons’ with the delegation representi­ng the government of President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi, but acknowledg­ed he had been unable to convince the rebel delegation to even show up for the talks.

“We didn’t manage to get ... the delegation from Sanaa to come here,” he told reporters.

“We just didn’t make it,” he said, insisting though that efforts would continue to bring the parties together.

The talks, meant to be the first meeting between Yemen’s warring sides in two years, had been scheduled to formally open Thursday, but the absence of the rebels left Griffiths scrambling to try to save them.

The Iran-backed Huthis, powerful armed tribes locked in a war with Yemen’s Saudibacke­d government, refused to take off from the rebel-held capital of Sanaa unless the UN met a list of conditions, which included securing a safe return from Geneva to Sanaa for their delegation.

They accused the Saudiled alliance backing the Hadi government of planning to strand their delegation in Djibouti, where their plane was to make a stop en route to Geneva.

They hinted they feared a repeat of 2016, when 108 days of talks in Kuwait broke down and a rebel delegation was stranded in Oman for three months due to an air blockade.

Complicati­ng things further, fighting flared again on the ground on Friday with government forces attempting to close in on the rebel-held Red Sea port of Hodeida, which had been expected to be one of the main topics of discussion in Geneva.

Head of the Yemeni government delegation, Foreign Minister Khaled Yamani, charged Saturday that the rebels were “trying to sabotage” the negotiatio­ns, and slammed them for being “totally irresponsi­ble”.

“I believe that their absence from Geneva is part of their panic over losing their grip on areas under their control,” he told reporters.

He also harshly criticised Griffiths for “appeasing” the rebels by refusing to lay blame for the failure of the talks squarely on their shoulders.

When asked at Saturday’s press conference who was to blame for the stillborn negotiatio­ns, Griffiths had insisted that “it’s not my job to find fault. It’s my job to find agreement”.

This enraged Yamani, who said the UN envoy in private conversati­ons had “expressed his dissatisfa­ction with (the) unjustifie­d position” of the Huthis not to come to Geneva.

“I believe that the (public) words of the Special Envoy ... were unfortunat­ely appeasing the coup plotters and giving them excuse,” he said, urging the UN to be “firmer”.

Griffiths, who said earlier this week he believed the Geneva talks would offer a “flickering signal of hope” to the Yemeni people, said Saturday that his own hope had not faltered.

“A restart is a very delicate, fragile moment” in any negotiatio­ns, he said.

“I don’t take this as a fundamenta­l blockage in the process.”

He hailed “good progress” made in discussion­s in recent days with the government delegation on so-called confidence-building measures, including issues like prisoner swaps and the reopening of Sanaa airport.

Griffiths said he would be travelling to Muscat and Sanaa over the next few days to lay the groundwork for future talks, but hinted he might initially engage in separate discussion­s with the two sides. —

I believe that their absence from Geneva is part of their panic over losing their grip on areas under their control. — Khaled Yamani, Yemen’s Foreign Minister

 ??  ?? KHALED YAMANI
KHALED YAMANI
 ??  ?? MARTIN GRIFFITHS
MARTIN GRIFFITHS

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