The Jerusalem Post

Yemen’s warring sides signal optimism for peace talks

Government, Houthi officials make conciliato­ry remarks • Border calm signals fatigue with war costs

- • By MOHAMMED GHOBARI

KUWAIT CITY (Reuters) – Yemen’s warring parties are sending conciliato­ry signals ahead of UN-backed talks starting on Monday, in a rare sign of mutual willingnes­s to end a yearold conflict that has caused one of the world’s worst humanitari­an crises.

A deal may help defuse tensions between Iran and Saudi Arabia.

Air strikes and heavy combat persist in many parts of the country, while armed forces who could yet play a spoiling role loom throughout Yemen’s tangled political scene.

Police said they foiled two car bomb attacks in the southern port of Aden on Sunday. In one case a policeman died when a car exploded after police opened fire on it rushing at a checkpoint at high speed.

But the recent rhetoric of the main combatants has been unusually mild.

“We are ready for a political transition which excludes no one... The world now looks to the Kuwait consultati­ons as a landmark of peace for Yemenis, and we will give everything we can to alleviate the suffering of the people,” Foreign Minister Abdel Malek al-Mekhlafi, from the Saudi-backed government now based in Aden, told state news agency Saba.

Muhammad Abdul-Salam, spokesman for the Houthi movement that controls the capital Sanaa and which Gulf Arab states say is allied to Iran, appeared conciliato­ry in an interview with Kuwaiti newspaper Al-Rai on Saturday.

“There should be a consensus authority during a definite transition­al phase to decide every political dispute,” he was quoted as saying. “Iran does not have any role in our sovereign decisions and we are not tools in anyone’s hands.”

Saudi Arabia and its Gulf Arab allies joined the war on March 26 of last year to back Yemen’s government after it was pushed into exile by the Houthis.

UN talks in June and December failed to end the war that has killed about 6,200 people, about half of them civilians. The war has allowed al-Qaida fighters to seize territory and opened a path for Islamic State gunmen to gain a foothold.

A partial naval blockade imposed by the Arab coalition has caused food shortages and prices for necessitie­s to skyrocket in the Gulf region’s poorest country.

An unpreceden­ted calm achieved between the two main antagonist­s beginning in March suggests that exhaustion over costs and casualties may be mounting. The Houthis agreed with Saudi Arabia to reduce attacks on the kingdom in exchange for a halt to Saudi-led air strikes on Sanaa, and the two sides carried out a prisoner exchange.

“This represents the best opportunit­y to end the war since it started – real progress has been made,” said Adam Baron, a visiting fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations.

The fate of Ali Abdullah Saleh, Yemen’s president of 33 years who was ousted by Arab Spring protests in 2012 and who has formed an alliance with the Houthis, remains unclear and could complicate transition plans.

While Saleh’s party will take part in the talks, the former leader has refused to depart Yemen’s political scene. The spread of al-Qaida and Islamic State in the south also makes it more difficult to resolve the conflict.

“There are a slew of potential spoilers. The past year has seen a proliferat­ion of warlords whose power is tied to the conflict continuing,” added Baron.

Hailing from a Shi’ite sect that ruled a thousand-year kingdom in northern Yemen until 1962, the Houthis said they were leading a revolution against corruption. They pushed president Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi from power in September 2014 and formed an alliance with his predecesso­r Saleh.

Regional Arab countries accuse the group of a power grab which would benefit their archrival Iran, and have fought to restore Hadi’s government.

 ?? (Khaled Abdullah/Reuters) ?? TRIBESMEN LOYAL to the Houthis attend a gathering in Sanaa yesterday.
(Khaled Abdullah/Reuters) TRIBESMEN LOYAL to the Houthis attend a gathering in Sanaa yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel