The Borneo Post

Hodeida ‘most difficult’ issue at Yemen talks, says UN source

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RIMBO, Sweden: The Yemeni city of Hodeida, home to both a valuable port and frontlines, has proved the most complex issue at UN- sponsored peace talks between warring parties, a source said.

Yemen’s Huthi rebels seized the Red Sea city of Hodeida, a traditiona­l conduit for 90 percent of food imports to impoverish­ed Yemen, in a massive territoria­l takeover in 2014, sparking the interventi­on of Saudi Arabia and its allies on behalf of the government the following year.

Shipments to Hodeida, including humanitari­an aid, have been severely restricted by the coalition.

Huthi fighters who are now ensconced in residentia­l neighbourh­oods to fight government forces.

The government demands the rebels withdraw completely from the city. The Huthis have refused.

“Hodeida is the most difficult of all,” a UN source said, adding that progress on the port was crucial to finding a solution to the conflict.

The Saudi- led alliance launched an offensive to retake densely- populated Hodeida in June, sparking fears of a fresh humanitari­an crisis in a country already at the brink of famine.

Foreign Minister Khaled al-Yamani told AFP Saturday a full rebel withdrawal from Hodeida city and port were non- negotiable to the Yemeni government.

Yamani said the government was “ready to coordinate with the UN on supervisio­n and the reinforcem­ent of port operations” on condition the Huthis vacated the area.

The conf lict has triggered what the UN calls the world’s worst humanitari­an crisis, with 14 million people now on the brink of famine. Nearly 10,000 people have died in under four years, according to conservati­ve estimates.

The Sweden talks, which opened Thursday, mark the first meeting between the Yemeni government and rival rebels since 2016 – when more than three months of talks on ending the Yemen collapsed without a breakthrou­gh.

Among the other issues under discussion in Sweden are potential humanitari­an corridors, a prisoner swap and the reopening of the defunct Sanaa internatio­nal airport. — AFP

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