Kuwait Times

Saudi-led coalition to free 200 Houthis amid peace push

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RIYADH: A Saudi-led military coalition said Tuesday it will release 200 Yemeni rebels and permit some flights from the insurgent-held capital Sanaa, as efforts to end the nearly five-year conflict gain momentum. The initiative­s coincide with a lull in Houthi attacks on Saudi Arabia and come after a senior official in Riyadh this month said it had an “open channel” with the Iran-aligned rebels.

Patients needing medical care will be allowed to be flown out of Sanaa airport, which has been closed to commercial flights since 2016, coalition spokesman Turki Al-Maliki said in a statement released by the official Saudi Press Agency. The coalition has decided “to release 200 prisoners of the Houthi militia” and will facilitate flights from Sanaa for “people in need of medical care” in cooperatio­n with the World Health Organizati­on, the statement added.

The decision was hailed by the Houthis, with senior leader Mohammed Ali Al-Houthi calling for a “mass reception” to welcome the released rebels. “We welcome the coalition decision... (and) call for them to end torture and abuse until all detainees and prisoners are freed,” Houthi, a senior figure in the rebels’ political leadership, said on Twitter. The Saudi-led coalition launched a military interventi­on in Yemen in 2015 in support of the country’s internatio­nally recognized government. It reportedly hoped for a quick win against the Houthis, but instead waded into a quagmire that has cost it billions of dollars and sparked a humanitari­an catastroph­e that has claimed tens of thousands of lives.

Riyadh now appears buoyed by a power sharing agreement it brokered earlier this month in a separate conflict between Yemen’s internatio­nally recognized government and southern separatist­s, which observers said could pave the way for a wider peace deal in the multi-faceted war. Further raising hopes, a senior official in Riyadh subsequent­ly said the Saudis have establishe­d an “open channel” with the Houthi rebels. “We don’t close our doors with the Houthis,” the official, who declined to be named, told reporters.

‘Something is changing’

Yemen, in the grip of what the UN has termed the world’s worst humanitari­an crisis, is widely seen as a proxy battlefron­t between Sunni powerhouse Saudi Arabia and its Shiite rival Iran. Tuesday’s developmen­t “is positive proof that the Saudi-Huthi talks are real and having at least a limited tangible impact,” Hussein Ibish, a scholar at the Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington, told AFP. “This is more bad news for the rebels’ Iranian backers.”

The developmen­t follows a lull in recent weeks after a spike in rebel missile and drone attacks over the summer launched from Yemeni territory on Saudi cities. Last Friday, UN envoy Martin Griffiths said the rate of coalition air strikes had sharply fallen over the past two weeks, in an apparent sign that “something is changing in Yemen”.

In a sign of the limits to the new mood however, air raids on Monday by the Saudi-led coalition killed eight Huthi rebels near the key western port of Hodeida, according to local officials. Yemen’s warring parties agreed under a deal brokered in Sweden last December to exchange 15,000 prisoners, but the accord has not been fully implemente­d. The coalition freed seven Houthi prisoners in January, and the rebels released 290 coalition fighters in September.

The Houthis hold Sanaa while the Saudi led-military coalition controls Yemen’s maritime borders and airspace. Last year, wounded rebels were flown out of Sanaa for treatment, in what was seen as a key step ahead of the December peace talks. — AFP

 ??  ?? ADEN: A reinforcem­ent convoy of Yemen’s Security Belt Force dominated by members of the Southern Transition­al Council (STC) seeking independen­ce for southern Yemen, heads from the southern city of Aden to Abyan province, amid tensions with the forces of Saudi-backed President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi. — AFP
ADEN: A reinforcem­ent convoy of Yemen’s Security Belt Force dominated by members of the Southern Transition­al Council (STC) seeking independen­ce for southern Yemen, heads from the southern city of Aden to Abyan province, amid tensions with the forces of Saudi-backed President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi. — AFP

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