The Star Malaysia

UN Council votes to send observers to Yemen

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NEW YORK: The United Nations Security Council unanimousl­y approved a resolution that authorises the deployment of observers to war-torn Yemen to oversee a fragile truce in the strategic Red Sea port of Hodeida.

The draft, which was submitted by Britain, had been the subject of tough negotiatio­ns among the 15 council members and was amended several times before the vote.

It also endorses the results of UN-brokered peace negotiatio­ns in Sweden last week. Yemen’s warring parties agreed to a ceasefire that took effect on Tuesday and the withdrawal of fighters in Hodeida, a major gateway for aid and food imports.

The city is a vital lifeline for millions at risk of starvation, and the ceasefire between Saudi-backed government forces and Houthi Syiah rebels is seen as the best chance yet of ending four years of devastatin­g conflict.

The agreement also included a planned prisoner swap involving about 15,000 detainees.

The UN Security Council resolution “insists on the full respect by all parties of the ceasefire agreed” for Hodeida.

It authorises the UN to “establish and deploy, for an initial period of 30 days from the adoption of this resolution, an advance team to begin monitoring” the ceasefire, under the leadership of retired Dutch general Patrick Cammaert.

Saudi Arabia welcomed the resolution which means the Houthis “will lose their margin of manoeuvre,” Khalid Manzlawi, the kingdom’s deputy permanent representa­tive to the UN, said in a statement carried by the official Saudi Press Agency.

He also thanked Kuwait and Saudi Arabia’s ally the United States “for reaching the appropriat­e formula for the resolution, which is in the interest of the people of Yemen and the maintenanc­e of internatio­nal peace and security”.

According to the UN, Cammaert – who served multiple times as a UN peacekeepe­r – was expected in the Jordanian capital Amman before heading to the rebel-held capital Sanaa and Hodeida.

The resolution also authorises UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres to “submit proposals as soon as possible before Dec 31, 2018, on how the United Nations will fully support the Stockholm Agreement as requested by the parties”. — AFP

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