Houthis snub new UN envoy for Yemen, president welcomes appointment

“There is no use in having any dialogue before airports and ports are opened as a humanitarian necessity and priority,” Houthi negotiator Mohammed Abdulsalam said. (File/AFP)
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Updated 09 August 2021
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Houthis snub new UN envoy for Yemen, president welcomes appointment

  • Yemeni President Abdrabbuh Mansour Hadi welcomed his appointment, called on his government to cooperate
  • Swedish diplomat Hans Grundberg was appointed on Friday as the new UN envoy

JEDDAH: The Iran-backed Houthi militia on Sunday snubbed the new UN special envoy for Yemen only two days after he began work.
The appointment of veteran Swedish diplomat Hans Grundberg on Friday had been widely welcomed by the international community, including Saudi Arabia, amid renewed hopes of an end to the seven-year war.
But chief Houthi negotiator Mohammed Abdulsalam said on Sunday that the group had no plans to meet the new envoy, and such a meeting would be pointless because Grundberg had “nothing in his hands.”
A UN-led initiative for a cease-fire and the lifting of sea and air restrictions imposed by the Arab coalition on Houthi-held areas has stalled. The coalition is seeking a simultaneous deal, but the Houthis are demanding the immediate reopening of Sanaa airport to allow flights to and from Iran, which supplies them with weapons and ammunition.

FASTFACT

Houthis are demanding the immediate reopening of Sanaa airport to allow flights to and from Iran, which supplies them with weapons and ammunition.

“There is no use in having any dialogue before airports and ports are opened as a humanitarian necessity and priority,” said Abdulsalam, who is based in Oman.
He said there had been no progress since last month’s visit to Riyadh by the US envoy for Yemen, Tim Lenderking. Lenderking’s latest trip to the region came as ground battles spread beyond Yemen’s gas-rich Marib province, the government’s last northern stronghold that the Houthis are trying to seize.
Yemeni President Abdrabbuh Mansur Hadi on Sunday welcomed Grundberg’s appointment, and called on his government to cooperate with him and facilitate his tasks to enhance peace opportunities.
During a phone call with Grundberg, Yemen’s prime minister renewed his government’s commitment to provide all assistance and support for his mission to succeed.
Maeen Abdulmalik Saeed said his “government was committed, under the directives of the president (and) in accordance with the three references, for a locally agreed upon and internationally supported political solution.”
The coalition intervened in Yemen in March 2015 after the Houthis ousted the internationally recognized government from Sanaa in a coup.


Syria’s leader set to visit Berlin with deportations in focus

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Syria’s leader set to visit Berlin with deportations in focus

BERLIN: Syrian President Ahmed Al-Sharaa is expected in Berlin on Tuesday for talks, as German officials seek to step up deportations of Syrians, despite unease about continued instability in their homeland.
Sharaa is scheduled to meet his counterpart Frank-Walter Steinmeier, the German president’s office said.
Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s office has yet to announce whether he would also hold talks with Sharaa during the visit.
Since ousting Syria’s longtime leader Bashar Assad in late 2024, Sharaa has made frequent overseas trips as the former Islamist rebel chief undergoes a rapid reinvention.
He has made official visits to the United States and France, and a series of international sanctions on Syria have been lifted.
The focus of next week’s visit for the German government will be on stepping up repatriations of Syrians, a priority for Merz’s conservative-led coalition since Assad was toppled.
Roughly one million Syrians fled to Germany in recent years, many of them arriving in 2015-16 to escape the civil war.
In November Merz, who fears being outflanked by the far-right AfD party on immigration, insisted there was “no longer any reason” for Syrians who fled the war to seek asylum in Germany.
“For those who refuse to return to their country, we can of course expel them,” he said.

- ‘Dramatic situation’ -

In December, Germany carried out its first deportation of a Syrian since the civil war erupted in 2011, flying a man convicted of crimes to Damascus.
But rights groups have criticized such efforts, citing continued instability in Syria and evidence of rights abuses.
Violence between the government and minority groups has repeatedly flared in multi-confessional Syria since Sharaa came to power, including recent clashes between the army and Kurdish forces.
Several NGOs, including those representing the Kurdish and Alawite Syrian communities in Germany, have urged Berlin to axe Sharaa’s planned visit, labelling it “totally unacceptable.”
“The situation in Syria is dramatic. Civilians are being persecuted solely on the basis of their ethnic or religious affiliation,” they said in a joint statement.
“It is incomprehensible to us and legally and morally unacceptable that the German government knowingly intends to receive a person suspected of being responsible for these acts at the chancellery.”
The Kurdish Community of Germany, among the signatories of that statement, also filed a complaint with German prosecutors in November, accusing Sharaa of war crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity.
There have also been voices urging caution within government.
On a trip to Damascus in October, Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul said that the potential for Syrians to return was “very limited” since the war had destroyed much of the country’s infrastructure.
But his comments triggered a backlash from his own conservative Christian Democratic Union party.