Gulf News

‘Talks with militia hinge on Hodeida’

YEMEN URGES WORLD PRESSURE ON MILITIA FOR DEAL IMPLEMENTA­TION

- BY RAMADAN AL SHERBINI Correspond­ent

The Yemeni government has ruled out new peace talks with Al Houthis before the Iran-allied militiamen implement a faltering truce deal on the port city of Hodeida.

The linkage was stressed by Yemen’s newly-appointed Foreign Minister Mohammad Abdullah Al Hadrami at a meeting with UN peace envoy Martin Griffiths in New York, Yemen’s official news agency Saba reported.

Last December, the government and Al Houthis reached a UN-brokered agreement in Sweden for redeployme­nt and withdrawal from Hodeida in western Yemen. At the time, the accord was seen as a breakthrou­gh to end Yemen’s years-long war. However, its implementa­tion has since been stymied over Al Houthis’ recalcitra­nce.

Saba quoted Al Hadrami as warning against allowing the militiamen to undermine the Hodeida pact.

The government has repeatedly accused Al Houthis of violating the agreement and staging a “show” withdrawal from three ports in the Red Sea city while they handed them over to their loyalists.

Al Hadrami urged internatio­nal efforts on pressure Al Houthis into complying with the Hodeida pact.

“The legitimate government does not expect those who have not abided by previous agreements to honour new ones,” the minister said, according to Asharq Al Awsat newspaper.

His meeting with Griffiths came after the latter made a regional tour that took him to Saudi Arabia and Oman in a new bid to revive stalled peacemakin­g in Yemen.

The militiamen still control parts of Hodeida, which is strategica­lly important because of its key port through which most Yemen’s imports and aid enter.

Yemen’s conflict erupted after Al Houthis unseated the internatio­nally recognised government of President Abd Rabbo Mansour Hadi and overran parts of the country, including the capital Sana’a, in December 2014.

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