Yemen president demands full rebel withdrawal from Hodeidah

Yemeni pro-government forces backed by the Saudi-led Arab military alliance gather during their fight against Houthi rebels in the area of Hodeida's airport on June 18, 2018. (AFP)
Updated 27 June 2018
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Yemen president demands full rebel withdrawal from Hodeidah

ADEN: Yemen’s embattled president has demanded a full rebel withdrawal from conflict-hit Hodeida, a government source said, after talks with the UN’s top envoy on Wednesday in Aden.
UN envoy Martin Griffiths met with President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi, whose troops are battling the country’s Houthi rebels for control of the Red Sea port city of Hodeida, in the latest round of talks aimed at containing the escalating violence.
“President Hadi insisted on the need for the Houthis to withdraw completely and without conditions from Hodeida, or face a military solution,” a Yemeni government source told AFP, requesting anonymity.
Yemen’s government has also demanded a “full withdrawal from the province of Hodeida, including the port” in a statement carried by state news agency Saba Wednesday.
Hodeida, home to the country’s most valuable port, is at the center of a weeks-long military offensive by the Yemeni government and its regional allies, led by the United Arab Emirates on the ground.
A diplomatic source has said the Houthi rebels have agreed to cede control of the port to the United Nations.
The report has not been confirmed by the UN.
The Yemeni president’s stance on a full rebel withdrawal from Hodeida is in step with that of his Emirati allies.
On Monday, UAE Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Anwar Gargash tweeted that a Houthi withdrawal from not only Hodeida port, but also the city was “essential.”
The Iran-backed Houthis have controlled the western city of Hodeida, and its port, since 2014, when they drove the Hadi government out of the capital and seized large swathes of northern Yemen.
On June 13, the UAE and its allies, including Saudi Arabia, launched a massive military operation — dubbed “Golden Victory” — to drive the rebels out of the Hodeida port.
Two rounds of UN-brokered talks with warring parties have failed to find a political solution to the Hodeida conflict, sparking fears of a fresh humanitarian disaster in the Arab world’s most impoverished country.
Some 70 percent of imports to Yemen, where eight million people face imminent famine, flow through the port of Hodeida.
Nearly 10,000 people have died in the Yemen war since 2015, when Saudi Arabia and its allies joined the government’s fight against the Houthis.
The United Nations has called Yemen the world’s largest humanitarian crisis.


Aid trucks resume crossing Egypt-Gaza border after closure

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Aid trucks resume crossing Egypt-Gaza border after closure

  • More than 100 aid trucks crossed the Egyptian side of Gaza’s Rafah border crossing on Tuesday, two sources told AFP
RAFAH: More than 100 aid trucks crossed the Egyptian side of Gaza’s Rafah border crossing on Tuesday, two sources told AFP.
Israel closed all crossings into the Gaza Strip on Saturday, after it launched a joint attack on Iran with the United States.
It agreed to reopen the Kerem Shalom crossing, where trucks from Egypt are inspected, for the “gradual entry of humanitarian aid.”
“More than 100 United Nations aid trucks, including UNICEF’s, entered the Rafah border crossing” on Tuesday, a source at the border told AFP on Wednesday on condition of anonymity.
An official with the Egyptian Red Crescent, which coordinates aid deliveries, said the trucks “went through Rafah to the Kerem Shalom crossing,” where Israeli authorities did not send any back to Egypt — their procedure when aid shipments are rejected.
Both sources said no Palestinians were allowed through the crossing on Tuesday.
The Rafah crossing, the only gateway for Gazans to the outside world that does not pass through Israel, had reopened for a trickle of people on February 2, nearly two years after Israeli forces seized it.
A statement from the Red Crescent on Tuesday said the convoy included hundreds of tons of food, relief supplies and “fuel products to operate hospitals and vital facilities.”
The UN had warned its partners were “forced to ration fuel, prioritize life-saving operations” in the devastated Palestinian territory.
The Red Crescent official said another aid convoy was sent on Wednesday and was waiting to be allowed in.
The October peace deal between Israel and Palestinian militant group Hamas stipulates that 600 aid trucks should be allowed in per day.