The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Rebel: Yemen’s warring sides set to make swaps

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RIMBO, SWEDEN — Delegation­s from Yemen’s warring sides agreed Tuesday to set Jan. 20 as a final date to swap over 15,000 prisoners from both sides of the country’s civil war, according to a member of the rebel delegation.

The internatio­nally recognized government of President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi and Iran-backed Shiite rebels said in news conference­s in Sweden they exchanged prisoner lists, allowing four weeks for review, ahead of a final swap facilitate­d by Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross.

The move is a crucial step in implementa­tion of an agreement reached earlier this month on exchange of all prisoners held by both sides over the four-year civil war.

The government, backed by a Saudi-led coalition, said it provided U.N. mediators with an initial list of 8,200 prisoners allegedly held by the rebels, known as Houthis.

The government list included members of the family of former President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who was killed by the Houthis in December of last year. It also included more than 300 children and 88 women.

The rebel delegation also said it has provided its own list of prisoners held by government forces.

“The Houthis provided a list of 7,487 captives and detainees. We provided a (list) of 8,576 detainees,” said Askar Zouail of the government delegation. “But the number of detainees (held by the rebels) exceeds 18,000 detainees since the beginning of the war (in March 2015).”

Othman Mujali, minister of agricultur­e from the Hadi government, said both sides are considerin­g a “mechanism” to implement the prisoner swap. “We hope the other side is serious. For us, we are serious and ready at the moment,” he said.

Abdul-Qader el-Murtaza, from Houthi delegation, said the government list included prisoners from member countries in the Saudi-led coalition, such as Sudan and the United Arab Emirates.

He said Jan. 20 has been set a final date for a prisoner swap overseen by the ICRC.

A period of four weeks has been set for queries and verificati­on of prisoner names “then there will be ten days for the Red Cross to prepare logistic and technical matters for the transfer and exchange of the prisoners,” he said.

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