The National - News

200 Houthi attacks flout Hodeidah ceasefire

- NASER AL WASMI

Houthi rebels flouted the UN-brokered ceasefire in Hodeidah more than 200 times in less than two weeks and show no signs of preparing to abide by the truce, the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Yemen told the Security Council.

The rebels killed 23 coalition forces and wounded 163 in 268 attacks between December 18 and December 30, according to a detailed list submitted by the permanent UN representa­tives of the three countries to the Council president on December 31. They also presented a letter calling for internatio­nal pressure on the Houthis to cease hostilitie­s.

The rebel attacks in and around the port city ranged from sniper fire and artillery barrages to the launching of medium-range ballistic missiles in attacks lasting up to an hour.

“The missile strikes in particular show that this vast number of breaches cannot be attributed to ill-discipline­d, individual Houthi fighters, but that these actions are part of a deliberate strategy of provocatio­n ... designed to undermine the Stockholm Agreement,” the letter said.

The truce agreed at UNbrokered talks in December

requires the Houthis to withdraw from Hodeidah’s ports before rebel and government forces pull out of the city and surroundin­g areas.

Martin Griffiths, the UN special envoy for Yemen, had prioritise­d a halt to fighting in Hodeidah – the entry point for the bulk of Yemen’s food and humanitari­an aid shipments, that 14 million Yemenis on the brink of famine rely on.

The letter to the Security Council said that the Houthis are not only breaking the truce, but they are also entrenchin­g themselves in the city. A map attached to the letter shows where the Iran-backed rebels have dug 51 new trenches around the city and set up 109 new barricades on city streets.

Patrick Cammaert, head of the UN ceasefire monitors in Hodeidah, met with rebel and government representa­tives on Wednesday as chair of the joint Redeployme­nt Co-ordination Committee to discuss security after both sides withdrew their forces.

He “expressed anger over the charade put on by the militias over their redeployme­nt of militia members disguised as security forces tasked to maintain the peace”, Col Waddah Al Dubeish, spokesman for the pro-government Amalikah Brigades, told The National.

The letter to the Security Council said the Houthis were stationing “heavy weapons in civilian neighbourh­oods” – a further sign the rebels intend to entrench their forces in the strategica­lly important city.

The three countries also asked the council to monitor the flow of Iranian weapons into Yemen and ensure compliance with its arms embargo. Success of the ceasefire depends on a significan­t shift in Iran’s behaviour, they said.

Residents of Hodeidah told

The National of other attempts by the rebels to circumvent the UN ceasefire.

They said the Houthis were buying homes in Hodeidah with the aim of disguising themselves as civilians and maintainin­g a sleeper force in the city.

In the past week, the Houthis increased their attacks on civilian population­s in and around the city. They have set up sniper nests in warehouses holding humanitari­an aid, according to the Arab Coalition, and killed residents in Hays.

The Houthis launched an attack south of Hodeidah earlier this week in which a civilian was killed by shrapnel from a rebel missile. People returning to liberated parts of Hodeidah said that retreating rebels had left behind landmines which have killed civilians and made areas of the city uninhabita­ble.

The militias also targeted coalition-supported forces responsibl­e for clearing mines laid by the rebels.

A countrywid­e coalition demining programme has defused more than 40,000 explosive devices so far.

Meanwhile, Col Al Dubeish said the Houthis threatened the Hodeidah governor, who was appointed by the rebels, to make him sign a letter which condemned Mr Cammaert and accused him of being biased towards the Yemeni government.

Houthi rebels have controlled the critical port city since 2015, giving them a chokehold on aid flows into the country.

Yemen receives about 70 per cent of its food imports and humanitari­an aid through Hodeidah.

The letter to the Security Council also pointed to the Houthis’ disruption of aid by blocking or seizing shipments for sale on the black market.

The World Food Programme executive director, David Beasley, has said the rebels were “stealing food from the mouths of hungry Yemeni children”.

 ?? AFP ?? Yemeni fishermen in the Red Sea waters off a dock in the embattled city of Hodeidah
AFP Yemeni fishermen in the Red Sea waters off a dock in the embattled city of Hodeidah

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