Reuters/Dubai
Talks to end months of fighting in Yemen will convene in Geneva at the end of October under the sponsorship of the United Nations, the UN special envoy for the issue has announced, urging the parties to try to make the negotiations a success.
Previous UN-sponsored talks between the Yemeni government and Yemen’s Shia militant group, the Houthis, failed in June, mainly because of differences over implementing a UN Security Council resolution calling for the Iran-backed Houthis to withdraw from cities they seized over the past year.
The UN special envoy to Yemen, Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed, wrote on his Facebook page late on Sunday that, after talks with President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi in Saudi Arabia, he had managed to persuade all the parties to attend a new round of talks in Geneva at the end of this month.
“While offering thanks to all parties, the United Nations calls for more flexibility, for opportunities may not be conducive after this time,” he added.
The Yemeni government said on Sunday it had agreed to attend talks after the Houthis formally committed to implementing UN Security Council Resolution 2216. The Houthis have previously said they would attend, but they have not commented since the Yemeni government announcement.
The Houthis wrote to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon earlier this month to tell him they accepted the Security Council resolution. That resolution called on all sides, including the Houthis, to end the violence and avoid unilateral action that would jeopardise the country’s political transition.
UN diplomatic sources said Ahmed had delivered a letter last week from Ban to Hadi, seen by Reuters, reiterating that the Houthis had repeatedly confirmed their commitment to the resolution and urging Hadi to talk with them.
“Based on this commitment, I trust that you will now be in a position to authorise your government’s participation in a new round of consultations with the Houthis and their allies,” he added.
The Yemeni government-run news agency sabanew.net cited an official in Hadi’s office as saying that the president had sent a letter to Ban yesterday that included the “readiness of the Yemeni government to participate in the talks with the coup factions ... especially after affirming its commitment to the United Nations and its Special Envoy with implementing UN Security Council Resolution 2216 without condition”.
The Saudi foreign ministry commended Hadi’s stand on the talks and welcomed the Houthi decision to honour UN Security Council Resolution 2216.
“It is considered a step in the right direction to solving the Yemeni crisis,” the ministry said in a statement attributed to a responsible source.
There are no comments.
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