Yemenis return after medical care in Jordan
ADEN: Yemenis who were airlited to Jordan to undergo treatment for critical illnesses earlier this year were brought home on Sunday on a flight, the United Nations said.
Thirty-one men, women and children in dire need of medical care were flown out in February along with their companions.
“A UN flight carrying civilian Yemenis & their companions just landed in #Sanaa,” the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said in a tweet, without saying how many had returned.
“Thanks to the UN medical air bridge, the patients received treatment in #Jordan for different chronic conditions for which they could not be treated inside #Yemen.”
The UN organised two evacuation flights to Amman in February, the first carrying seven children and the second with 24 other patients.
“Nine patients and their companions arrived in Sanaa on board the UN chartered plane,” Dr Motahar Darouiche told reporters.
He said 10 Yemeni patients were still in Jordan. “Five will return on Monday and the other five ater the repatriation procedures are completed,” he added. He did not specify where the remaining patients were.
Darouiche called for the reopening of Sanaa airport to commercial flights to “alleviate the suffering of thousands of patients who need treatment abroad.”
Last November the coalition said it was prepared to allow medical evacuations from the airport as a confidence-building measure to support UN peace efforts.
The return of the medical flight comes shortly ater the warring sides in Yemen’s long conflict agreed to exchange 1,081 prisoners, ater talks in Switzerland.
The release of the loyalists and insurgents -- if it materialises -- would mark the first largescale handover since the war erupted in 2014.
The agreement was a modest step forward amid efforts to end he six-year conflict.
Separately, Jordan’s King Abdullah on Saturday accepted the resignation of Prime
Minister Omar al Razzaz but asked him to stay on as a caretaker premier until he designates a successor to oversee parliamentary elections on Nov. 10, state media said.
King Abdullah dissolved parliament last Sunday at the end of its four-year term in a move that under constitutional rules meant the government had to resign within a week.