Khaleej Times

HoutHis quit Hodeida port

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HODEIDA — Yemeni rebels have begun to withdraw from the port of Hodeida, the country’s key aid lifeline, under an agreement reached in Sweden earlier this month, a UN official said on Saturday.

The official, who requested anonymity, said the Houthi rebels began to pull back from the Red Sea port at midnight. The rebel withdrawal from the port, which is the point of entry for food aid to some 14 million Yemenis UN agencies say are on the brink of famine, is a key part of a ceasefire that went into effect on December 18.

Pro-government forces are also supposed to pull back from parts of the city they recaptured in an offensive they launched with the backing of a Saudi-led coalition on June 13. The Houthis began “the first phase of redeployme­nt from the Hodeida port”, a rebel official told the Houthi-run Saba news agency. The rebels held a ceremony to mark the occasion, an AFP correspond­ent reported.

The UN Security Council last week unanimousl­y approved a resolution authorisin­g the deployment of observers to oversee a hard-won truce for Hodeida that was agreed by the Saudi-backed government and the rebels in Sweden this month.

Retired Dutch general Patrick Cammaert is heading a joint truce monitoring committee, which includes both government and rebel representa­tives, and chaired its first meeting this week. The UN-led panel addressed “the first phase of the implementa­tion of the agreement... based on ceasefire, confidence building measures to deliver humanitari­an assistance and redeployme­nt”, a UN statement said.

It added that the panel would convene again on January 1 to discuss “detailed plans for full redeployme­nt”.

The UN also said that a humanitari­an convoy was expected later on Saturday to leave Hodeida port and travel along the main road that links it to the rebelheld capital Sanaa. Its destinatio­n was not immediatel­y clear.

“As a confidence building measure, the parties have agreed to begin opening blocked humanitari­an corridors, starting with the Hodeida-Sanaa road, followed by other routes, in a phased manner,” said the statement.

 ??  ?? READ: Coalition’s efforts are paying off, peace will return sooner than later
READ: Coalition’s efforts are paying off, peace will return sooner than later

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