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UN envoy holds ‘fruitful’ talks with Yemen rebel chief

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The UN envoy for Yemen said Wednesday he had held "fruitful" talks with rebel leader Abdulmalik al-Huthi in his bid to avert all-out fighting for the strategic port city of Hodeida.

"I'm greatly reassured by the messages I have received, which have been positive and constructive," Martin Griffiths told reporters at Sanaa airport after two days of talks in the rebel-held capital.

"All parties have not only underscored their strong desire for peace, but have also engaged with me on concrete ideas for achieving peace," he said.

"I'm especially thankful to Abdulmalik al-Huthi, whom I met yesterday, for his support and the fruitful discussion we held."

Griffiths said he would brief the UN Security Council on Thursday on his latest talks in Yemen, where a brutal war between the rebels and the Saudi-backed government threatens to engulf Hodeida, the entry point for desperately needed humanitarian aid.

Yemen
Yemen
AFP, AFP

In the coming days, the UN envoy is to meet President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi, whose loyalists have reached the southern outskirts of the Red Sea port city with support from Emirati troops.

On June 13, the government and its allies in a regional coalition, led by Saudi Arabia and the UAE, launched a major assault on Hodeida, sparking UN fears of a fresh humanitarian crisis in a country on the brink of famine.

Griffiths, who was appointed to the post in February after his predecessor threw in the towel, said finding a solution to the Hodeida conflict could create "positive conditions" for the "rapid and urgent restart of political negotiations in the coming days".

Hodeida is the latest battleground in the Yemeni conflict, which has killed nearly 10,000 people since 2015, 2,200 of them children.

The Red Sea port provides a lifeline for the 22 million Yemenis dependent on humanitarian aid and is also the point of entry for three-quarters of the country's commercial imports.

The government and the Saudi-led alliance accuse the Iran-backed rebels of receiving smuggled weapons through Hodeida and have demanded their unconditional withdrawal from the city, which they have held since 2014.

The UN envoy for Yemen said Wednesday he had held “fruitful” talks with rebel leader Abdulmalik al-Huthi in his bid to avert all-out fighting for the strategic port city of Hodeida.

“I’m greatly reassured by the messages I have received, which have been positive and constructive,” Martin Griffiths told reporters at Sanaa airport after two days of talks in the rebel-held capital.

“All parties have not only underscored their strong desire for peace, but have also engaged with me on concrete ideas for achieving peace,” he said.

“I’m especially thankful to Abdulmalik al-Huthi, whom I met yesterday, for his support and the fruitful discussion we held.”

Griffiths said he would brief the UN Security Council on Thursday on his latest talks in Yemen, where a brutal war between the rebels and the Saudi-backed government threatens to engulf Hodeida, the entry point for desperately needed humanitarian aid.

Yemen

Yemen
AFP, AFP

In the coming days, the UN envoy is to meet President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi, whose loyalists have reached the southern outskirts of the Red Sea port city with support from Emirati troops.

On June 13, the government and its allies in a regional coalition, led by Saudi Arabia and the UAE, launched a major assault on Hodeida, sparking UN fears of a fresh humanitarian crisis in a country on the brink of famine.

Griffiths, who was appointed to the post in February after his predecessor threw in the towel, said finding a solution to the Hodeida conflict could create “positive conditions” for the “rapid and urgent restart of political negotiations in the coming days”.

Hodeida is the latest battleground in the Yemeni conflict, which has killed nearly 10,000 people since 2015, 2,200 of them children.

The Red Sea port provides a lifeline for the 22 million Yemenis dependent on humanitarian aid and is also the point of entry for three-quarters of the country’s commercial imports.

The government and the Saudi-led alliance accuse the Iran-backed rebels of receiving smuggled weapons through Hodeida and have demanded their unconditional withdrawal from the city, which they have held since 2014.

AFP
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