Houston Chronicle

Warring sides in key Yemeni city agree to truce

- By Declan Walsh

CAIRO — Yemen’s warring parties have agreed to a cease-fire in the crucial port city of Hodeida, the U.N. chief said Thursday, announcing the biggest step toward peace in years for a war that has produced the world’s worst humanitari­an crisis.

The Saudi-led coalition and Houthi rebels have agreed to withdraw their forces from Hodeida, the main conduit for humanitari­an aid entering Yemen, and to implement a cease-fire in the surroundin­g province, Secretary-General António Guterres told reporters.

He made the announceme­nt in Rimbo, Sweden, at the end of a week of negotiatio­ns intended to pave the way for full peace talks. Amid smiles and handshakes, representa­tives from the two sides also agreed to implement a prisoner exchange involving as many as 15,000 people, and to allow a humanitari­an corridor into Taiz, Yemen’s third-largest city. They agreed to meet again in January.

The terms of the deal announced by Guterres were vague in places, with talk of a “mutual redeployme­nt” to stop the fighting in Hodeida, and a “leading role” for the United Nations in the city. The United Nations is due to oversee the withdrawal of all combatants from the city within 21 days, but there was little detail about how that will happen.

Although the agreement offered a glimmer of hope for a conflict whose dire toll has drawn global outrage, numerous earlier peace efforts in Yemen have quickly crumbled, and analysts warned that this one required urgent, concerted internatio­nal support to save it from a similar fate.

“Now it’s time for the U.N. Security Council to entrench the cease-fire agreement with a resolution,” Peter Salisbury, a Yemen expert at the Internatio­nal Crisis Group, wrote on Twitter. “There is no excuse for internatio­nal inaction now, and this fragile moment must be protected.”

Humanitari­an gesture

Both the Houthis and the Saudi-led coalition stressed that the cease-fire agreement signed Thursday was not a comprehens­ive peace deal but purely a humanitari­an gesture aimed at building goodwill.

“Neither side sees it as the beginning of the end of the conflict,” Salisbury said.

Even so, Thursday’s agreement marks a shift in the broader war.

In the past month, the United Arab Emirates, part of the Saudi coalition, has led a fierce drive to seize Hodeida, with its warplanes supporting allied Yemeni forces on the ground. They have almost surrounded the city, with the Houthis controllin­g just one road leading out of it.

Now, those hard-won gains will have to be surrendere­d if, as the deal stipulates, Hodeida is effectivel­y taken out of the fight.

Anwar Gargash, the Emirati minister of state for foreign affairs, put a positive gloss on the deal, framing it as a product of his forces’ military success. “Our sincere appreciati­on to the 5,000 Emirati soldiers along with Yemeni forces who were ready to liberate the port,” he said in a statement. “Their bravery and commitment made the diplomatic progress possible.”

The internatio­nal sense of urgency over Yemen has been driven by warnings that the humanitari­an crisis could soon turn into a catastroph­e. Aid groups say that tens of thousands of children have already starved to death in Yemen because of the war and that 12 million people are at risk of starvation if the fighting does not stop immediatel­y. A child dies every 10 minutes in Yemen from preventabl­e causes, according to UNICEF.

Khashoggi case

Intense scrutiny of Saudi actions since the killing of dissident Jamal Khashoggi has increased pressure on the Saudi-led coalition to come to talks and raised hopes for a peace agreement.

The Khashoggi case has also upped pressure on the United States, which provides military assistance to the Saudi-led side.

In Washington, the Senate voted resounding­ly Thursday afternoon to withdraw U.S. military assistance for Saudi Arabia’s war in Yemen. The House, however, earlier this week moved to scuttle the measure, all but assuring it will expire this year without making it to President Donald Trump’s desk, who would likely veto it anyway.

‘Just a first step’

The fighting in Yemen started when Houthis seized power in the chaos that engulfed the country after the Arab Spring in 2011. But the war has since developed into a proxy conflict of sorts with Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates supporting the government, and Iran backing the Houthis, who belong to an offshoot of Shiite Islam known as Zaydism.

The last talks between Yemen’s warring sides took place in 2016.

In the talks in Sweden this week, U.N. officials tried and failed to get both sides to sign on to a framework peace plan. Officials also had aimed to broker a deal to reopen the internatio­nal airport in the capital, Sanaa, which has been subject of a Saudi blockade since 2015, but could not reach an agreement on that issue, either.

But they were able to strike a deal that may ease the suffering in Hodeida.

The focus turns next to the U.N. Security Council. Britain, which directs discussion­s about Yemen, will decide whether to introduce a resolution to reinforce the deal signed in Sweden.

But the key is what happens on the ground in Yemen in the coming weeks, as U.N. officials oversee the planned withdrawal from Hodeida.

“This is just a first step,” said Abdikadir Mohamud, director of Mercy Corps in Yemen. “The measure of the agreement will be taken in action on the ground, not words in a conference room.”

 ?? Mohammed Huwais / AFP / Getty Images ?? Yemeni men gather Thursday in the capital Sanaa to support to the Shiite Houthi movement against the Saudi-led interventi­on. A cease-fire was announced that allows a vital port to reopen.
Mohammed Huwais / AFP / Getty Images Yemeni men gather Thursday in the capital Sanaa to support to the Shiite Houthi movement against the Saudi-led interventi­on. A cease-fire was announced that allows a vital port to reopen.

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