UN envoy Griffiths leaves Sanaa after failing to persuade Houthis to surrender Hodeidah

Martin Griffiths, the United Nation's special envoy for Yemen, is pictured upon his arrival at Sanaa international airport on July 25, 2018. (AFP)
Updated 27 July 2018
Follow

UN envoy Griffiths leaves Sanaa after failing to persuade Houthis to surrender Hodeidah

LONDON: UN envoy Martin Griffiths left Sanaa on Friday after failing to persuade the Houthis to surrender Hodeidah and return to negotiations, Al-Arabiya reported. 

Griifiths arrived in the capital Sanaa on Wednesday for talks with Houthi militias but failed to persuade them to hand over the strategic Red Sea port city of Hodeidah. 

The UN envoy had been pushing to relaunch negotiations between Yemen's internationally recognised government and the Iran-backed Houthi militias for weeks.

The envoy's visit to Sanaa followed meetings in Riyadh on Sunday with Yemeni government officials, who demanded that the Houthis release all detainees.
Hodeidah's port is the entry point for some 70 percent of imports in a country where eight million people face imminent famine.

The Red Sea port has been controlled by the rebels since 2014, when they drove the government out of the capital Sanaa and much of the country.
The government and the Saudi-led coalition fighting the Houthis accuse the Iran-backed rebels of receiving smuggled weapons through Hodeidah and have demanded their unconditional withdrawal from the city.

 


Supplies running out at Syria’s Al-Hol camp as clashes block aid deliveries

Updated 4 sec ago
Follow

Supplies running out at Syria’s Al-Hol camp as clashes block aid deliveries

DAMASCUS: An international humanitarian organization has warned that supplies are running out at a camp in northeast Syria housing thousands of people linked to the Daesh group, as the country’s government fights to establish control over an area formerly controlled by Kurdish fighters.
The late Friday statement by Save the Children came a week after government forces captured Al-Hol camp, which is home to more than 24,000 people, mostly children and women, including many wives or widows of Daesh members.
The capture of the camp came after intense fighting earlier this month between government forces and members of the Kurdish-led and US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces during which forces loyal to interim President Ahmad Al-Sharaa captured wide areas in eastern and northeastern Syria.
The SDF signed a deal to end the fighting after suffering major defeats, but sporadic clashes between it and the government have continued.
Save the Children said that “critical supplies in Al-Hol camp are running dangerously low” as clashes are blocking the safe delivery of humanitarian aid.
It added that last week’s clashes around the camp forced aid agencies to temporarily suspend regular operations at Al-Hol. It added that the main road leading to the camp remains unsafe, which is preventing humanitarian workers from delivering food and water or running basic services for children and families.
“The situation in Al-Hol camp is rapidly deteriorating as food, water and medicines run dangerously low,” said Rasha Muhrez, Save the Children Syria country director. “If humanitarian organizations are unable to resume work, children will face still more risks in the camp, which was already extremely dangerous for them before this latest escalation.”
Muhrez added that all parties to the conflict must ensure a safe humanitarian corridor to Al-Hol so basic services can resume and children can be protected. “Lives depend on it,” she said.
The SDF announced a new agreement with the central government on Friday, aiming to stabilize a ceasefire that ended weeks of fighting and lay out steps toward integrating the US-backed force into the army and police forces.