Yemen’s factions ‘ready’ to exchange hundreds of prisoners on Thursday

Yemenis greet their freed relatives during a prisoner exchange, Taiz, Yemen, Sept. 29, 2021. (AFP/FILE)
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Updated 12 April 2023
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Yemen’s factions ‘ready’ to exchange hundreds of prisoners on Thursday

  • ICRC’s planes will begin transferring dozens of Yemeni government prisoners
  • Planes would then fly back to Sanaa, carrying more than 200 Houthis

AL-MUKALLA: Yemen’s warring parties and the International Committee of the Red Cross have completed preparations for a three-day prisoner exchange operation, which will commence on Thursday, a Yemeni government negotiator told Arab News on Tuesday.

Majed Fadhail, a member of the government’s delegation to prisoner exchange negotiations, said the ICRC had completed meeting and verifying the names of the would-be freed prisoners and that the ICRC’s planes will begin transferring dozens of Yemeni government prisoners on Thursday, including former Defense Minister Mohammed Al-Subaihy and the former president’s brother Nasser Mansour Hadi, from the Houthi-held Sanaa International Airport to Aden. The plane would then fly back to Sanaa, carrying more than 200 Houthis, he added.

On the second and third days, ICRC aircraft will transport detainees from Sanaa, including prisoners from the Arab coalition and four journalists, to Yemen’s Marib, Aden, and Mokha airports, as well as Saudi Arabia’s Abha and Riyadh airports, and would return Houthi prisoners from those airports to Sanaa.

Last month, the Yemeni government and the Houthis reached an agreement, mediated by the UN, in Switzerland to exchange more than 800 detainees, including four journalists on execution row and prominent political and military figures.

Early this month, the Houthis agreed to Saudi peace proposals to exchange all prisoners with their opponents, open roads in the besieged city of Taiz, and stop attacking oil facilities in government-controlled southern Yemen in exchange for lifting restrictions on Sanaa Airport and Hodeidah‘a port, the Yemeni government sharing oil revenues with them, and paying public employees in the area they control.

Observers in Yemen say that the Houthis, who have long resisted peace proposals and demands to end their siege of Taiz, abruptly reversed their position on peace efforts out of fear of losing the support of Iranians who reconciled with Saudi Arabia.

Separately, the UN Mission to Support the Hodeidah Agreement has recorded 17 civilian casualties in March as a result of detonations of land mines and explosive remnants of war in various Houthi-controlled districts in the western province of Hodeidah.

The UN observers said land mines killed eight civilians, including a woman and a child, and injured nine others in Hodeidah’s Al-Hali and At Tuhayta districts, representing a 21 percent increase in human casualties in the province compared to the same month last year and a 19 percent decrease compared to February 2023.

They added that between March 2022 and March 2023, 99 Yemenis were killed and 209 were injured in land mine and other explosive incidents in Hodeidah province.

Yemeni deminers and others from the Saudi-funded demining program say that hundreds of Yemeni civilians had been killed and hundreds injured in land mine explosions around the nation and that Hodeidah was the most contaminated Yemeni province, where the Houthis had planted thousands of land mines over the previous six years.

Yemeni Landmine Records, a group that keeps track of civilian land mine casualties in the country, said this month that Houthi-laid land mines and explosive remnants of war had killed at least 349 Yemenis and injured 523 in 11 Yemeni provinces since January of last year.

Meanwhile, the Yemeni government’s Executive Unit for IDP Camps said that 5,018 people, or 1,209 families, were displaced from their homes and tents in Marib, Shabwa, Hodeidah, and Taiz in March as a result of the sporadic fighting between the Yemeni government and the Houthis.


Israeli army takes journalists into a tunnel in a Gaza city it seized and largely flattened

Updated 10 December 2025
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Israeli army takes journalists into a tunnel in a Gaza city it seized and largely flattened

  • Israel and Hamas are on the cusp of finishing the first phase of the truce, which mandated the return of all hostages, living and dead, in exchange for Palestinians held by Israel
  • Hamas has said communication with its remaining units in Rafah has been cut off for months and that it was not responsible for any incidents occurring in those areas

RAFAH, Gaza Strip: One by one, the soldiers squeezed through a narrow entrance to a tunnel in southern Gaza. Inside a dark hallway, some bowed their heads to avoid hitting the low ceiling, while watching their step as they walked over or around jagged concrete, crushed plastic bottles and tattered mattresses.
On Monday, Israel’s military took journalists into Rafah — the city at Gaza’s southernmost point that troops seized last year and largely flattened — as the 2-month-old Israel-Hamas ceasefire reaches a critical point. Israel has banned international journalists from entering Gaza since the war began more than two years ago, except for rare, brief visits supervised by the military, such as this one.
Soldiers escorted journalists inside a tunnel, which they said was one of Hamas’ most significant and complex underground routes, connecting cities in the embattled territory and used by top Hamas commanders. Israel said Hamas had kept the body of a hostage in the underground passage: Hadar Goldin, a 23-year-old soldier who was killed in Gaza more than a decade ago and whose remains had been held there.
Hamas returned Goldin’s body last month as part of a US-brokered ceasefire in the war triggered by the militants’ Oct. 7, 2023, attack on southern Israel in which 1,200 people were killed and hundreds taken hostage. Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed more than 70,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which operates under the Hamas-run government. The ministry does not differentiate between civilians and combatants, but says roughly half the dead have been women and children.
Israel and Hamas are on the cusp of finishing the first phase of the truce, which mandated the return of all hostages, living and dead, in exchange for Palestinians held by Israel. The body of just one more hostage remains to be returned.
Mediators warn the second phase will be far more challenging since it includes thornier issues, such as disarming Hamas and Israel’s withdrawal from the strip. Israel currently controls more than half of Gaza.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is set to travel to Washington this month to discuss those next steps with US President Donald Trump.
Piles of rubble line Rafah’s roads
Last year, Israel launched a major operation in Rafah, where many Palestinians had sought refuge from offensives elsewhere. Heavy fighting left much of the city in ruins and displaced nearly one million Palestinians. This year, when the military largely had control of the city, it systematically demolished most of the buildings that remained standing, according to satellite photos.
Troops also took control of and shut the vital Rafah crossing, Gaza’s only gateway to the outside world that was not controlled by Israel.
Israel said Rafah was Hamas’ last major stronghold and key to dismantling the group’s military capabilities, a major war aim.
On the drive around Rafah on Monday, towers of mangled concrete, wires and twisted metal lined the roads, with few buildings still standing and none unscathed. Remnants of people’s lives were scattered the ground: a foam mattress, towels and a book explaining the Qur’an.
Last week, Israel said it was ready to reopen the Rafah crossing but only for people to leave the strip. Egypt and many Palestinians fear that once people leave, they won’t be allowed to return. They say Israel is obligated to open the crossing in both directions.
Israel has said that entry into Gaza would not be permitted until Israel receives all hostages remaining in the strip.
Inside the tunnel
The tunnel that journalists were escorted through runs beneath what was once a densely populated residential neighborhood, under a United Nations compound and mosques. Today, Rafah is a ghost town. Underground, journalists picked their way around dangling cables and uneven concrete slabs covered in sand.
The army says the tunnel is more than 7 kilometers (4 miles) long and up to 25 meters (82 feet) deep and was used for storing weapons as well as long-term stays. It said top Hamas commanders were there during the war, including Mohammed Sinwar — who was believed to have run Hamas’ armed wing and was the younger brother of Yahya Sinwar, the Hamas leader who helped mastermind the Oct. 7 attack. Israel has said it has killed both of them.
“What we see right here is a perfect example of what Hamas did with all the money and the equipment that was brought into Gaza throughout the years,” said Lt. Col. Nadav Shoshani. “Hamas took it and built an incredible city underground for the purposes of terror and holding bodies of hostages.”
Israel has long accused Hamas of siphoning off money for military purposes. While Hamas says the Palestinians are an occupied people and have a right to resist, the group also has a civilian arm and ran a government that provided services such as health care, a police force and education.
The army hasn’t decided what to do with the tunnel. It could seal it with concrete, explode it or hold it for intelligence purposes among other options.
Since the ceasefire began, three soldiers have been killed in clashes with about 200 Hamas militants that Israeli and Egyptian officials say remain underground in Israeli-held territory.
Hamas has said communication with its remaining units in Rafah has been cut off for months and that it was not responsible for any incidents occurring in those areas.
Both Israel and Hamas have accused each other of repeated violations of the deal during the first phase. Israel has accused Hamas of dragging out the hostage returns, while Palestinian health officials say over 370 Palestinians have been killed in continued Israeli strikes since the ceasefire took effect.