IQNA

Ansarullah Negotiator Says Main Yemen Port Should Be Neutral Zone

16:35 - December 08, 2018
News ID: 3467409
TEHRAN (IQNA) – Yemen’s main port city should be declared a “neutral zone” and the United Nations could play a role in Sanaa airport, the Houthis Ansarullah movement’s main negotiator said on Saturday on the sidelines of talks aimed at ending the Yemeni war.

 

The movement controls major population centers in Yemen, including the capital Sanaa and the Red Sea port of Hudaydah, a lifeline for millions of people that is now a focus of the war after the Saudi-led coalition launched a campaign to capture it this year.

UN Special envoy Martin Griffiths is trying to avert a full-scale assault on Hudaydah, the entry point for most of Yemen’s commercial goods and vital aid.

 “It (Hudaydah) should be a neutral zone apart from the conflict, and the military brigades that came from outside Hodeidah province should leave,” Houthi negotiator, Mohammed Abdusalam, told Reuters in Rimbo on the sidelines of peace talks with the Saudi-backed government.

The UN-sponsored talks, the first in more than two years, are focused on confidence-building steps, including reopening Sanaa airport and a truce in Hudaydah that could lead to a broader ceasefire in the nearly four-year-old Saudi-led aggression that has pushed Yemen to the verge of starvation.

Asked if Houthi forces would then withdraw from Hudaydah, Abdusalam said: “There will be no need for military presence there if battles stop ... Hudaydah is an economic hub and it should stay that way for the sake of all Yemenis.”

“We have proposed to the UN to oversee the port and supervise its logistics... inspections, revenues and all the technical issues,” he said.

He declined to say who will control the city if both forces leave.

Griffiths secured a prisoner swap deal on the first day of the talks on Thursday. But a UN source said the two sides remained far apart on Sanaa airport and Hudaydah.

The Houthi negotiator said dedicated committees are still discussing the number of prisoners involved. “The problem is with trust, (both sides) do not want to give precise numbers because each is worried that the other will hide something.”

Abdusalam said his group was open to the possibility of a UN role at Sanaa airport to secure agreement to reopen the facility, which has been bombed by the coalition several times.

The airport is in Houthi territory but access is restricted by the Saudi-led coalition, which controls the air space.

Abduslam said any political solution to the war should start with outlining a transitional period with an exact timeframe, and should include all the country’s political parties.

Since March 2015, Saudi Arabia and some of its Arab allies have been carrying out deadly airstrikes against the Houthi Ansarullah movement in an attempt to restore power to fugitive former president Abd Rabbuh Mansour Hadi, a close ally of Riyadh.

The Yemeni Ministry of Human Rights announced in a statement on March 25 that the war had left 600,000 civilians dead and injured until then. The war and the accompanying blockade have also caused famine across Yemen.

Tags: iqna ، yemen ، houthi
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