The Borneo Post

UN chief tempers hopes on Yemen as rebels back peace talks

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BUENOS AIRES: UN SecretaryG­eneral Antonio Guterres on Thursday played down hopes for an imminent breakthrou­gh on ending Yemen’s brutal war, saying he hoped talks would start by the end of the year.

Huthi rebels, who have persisted in their fight despite an onslaught from neighborin­g Saudi Arabia, earlier Thursday said they were ready to take part in negotiatio­ns that the United Nations had earlier mooted for next week in Sweden.

But Guterres lowered hopes on the timing of the talks, which are being arranged as millions of Yemenis are feared to be on the brink of starvation.

“I don’t want to raise too much expectatio­ns, but we are working hard in order to make sure that we can start meaningful peace talks still this year,” Guterres told reporters in Buenos Aires, where he will take part in the G20 summit.

“But, as you know, there have been some setbacks,” he said, pointing in part to Saudi Arabia’s concerns over continued rocket attacks by the Huthis.

The United Nations has described Yemen, which is under both a blockade and a bombing campaign by Saudi Arabia, as the world’s worst humanitari­an disaster, with at least 10,000 people killed since the interventi­on began in 2015.

Internatio­nal patience has been wearing thin with Saudi Arabia, which is trying to bolster the internatio­nally backed president, Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi.

TheUSSenat­emovedWedn­esday to cut off US support for the Saudi-led coalition, outraged at accounts of attacks on civilian targets including hospitals and a school bus.

The step marked an unusual defiance of President Donald Trump, who has defended a strong partnershi­p with the kingdom’s ambitious crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman.

But Guterres and Trump may meet the 33-year- old heir apparent in Buenos Aires, a bold internatio­nal appearance for the prince as he faces criticism over the kingdom’s murder of dissident journalist Jamal Khashoggi inside Riyadh’s consulate in Istanbul.

The Trump administra­tion has publicly encouraged Saudi Arabia to wind down the war and has cited the peace talks as a way to forge ahead with a solution.

The rebels, who have ties with Saudi Arabia’s arch- enemy Iran, had balked at attending previous peace talks planned for September in Geneva, saying that the UN could not guarantee their delegation’s return to the Huthicontr­olled capital Sanaa.

But Mohammed Ali al- Huthi, who heads the rebels’ Higher Revolution­ary Committee, sounded upbeat about talks in Sweden – while reiteratin­g calls for safe passage.

“I think that the national ( Huthi) delegation will be in Sweden God willing on Dec 3 if guarantees remain to ensure they can depart and return,” Huthi said on Twitter.

He said there should also be “positive indication­s on the importance of peace from the other side.”

The Huthis’ top political leader Mahdi al-Mashat, in a statement later published by the rebels’ news agency, called for a reduction in hostilitie­s ahead of the talks and said rebels were exercising “high levels of self-restraint.”

Hadi’s government has already said it is willing to join the negotiatio­ns in Sweden.

Previous talks broke down in 2016, when 108 days of negotiatio­ns in Kuwait failed to yield a deal and left rebel delegates stranded in Oman for three months. — AFP

 ??  ?? US Ambassador to Yemen Matthew H Tueller (front, third left) arrives at Mukalla airport, southweste­rn Yemen. — AFP photo
US Ambassador to Yemen Matthew H Tueller (front, third left) arrives at Mukalla airport, southweste­rn Yemen. — AFP photo

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