U.N. Ceasefire Monitor Head Visits Key Yemen Port

W460

The head of the United Nations team tasked with monitoring a fragile ceasefire in the flashpoint city of Hodeida on Monday visited its lifeline docks, a port official said.

Retired Dutch general Patrick Cammaert also called on Yemen's warring sides -- Saudi-backed government forces and Iran-linked Huthi rebels -- to respect the hard-won truce agreed this month in Sweden, Hodeida port deputy director Yehya Sharafeddin said.

Cammaert visited the docks through which the majority of imports and humanitarian aid enter war-torn Yemen, Sharafeddin said.

"The (U.N.) official promised us that the war will end," he told AFP by phone.

"He said the Yemen war had been forgotten for years but that the international community is now adamant about ending it," Sharafeddin added.

Cammaert is heading a joint committee including members of the government and the Huthi rebels, in charge of monitoring a truce in the vital Red Sea city and its surroundings.

Cammaert arrived in Hodeida from the rebel-held capital Sanaa after meeting with government officials in Aden.

Yemen's warring sides agreed on a ceasefire to halt a devastating offensive by government forces and an allied Saudi-led coalition against rebel-held Hodeida at peace talks in Sweden this month.

According to the U.N. he will chair on Wednesday a meeting of a joint committee including members of the government and the Huthi rebels, in charge of monitoring a truce in the vital Red Sea port.

That meeting will be "one of the priorities" of Cammaert's mission, U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric said on Sunday

The U.N. Security Council unanimously approved a resolution authorizing the deployment of observers to Hodeida to monitor the truce that came into effect last week.

Sharafeddin said that Cammaert "stressed the importance of implementing the agreement" and will visit "battlefronts (in the city) at a later time."

The ceasefire was agreed at peace talks in Sweden earlier this month following intense diplomatic efforts led by the U.N.

But the truce has remained shaky, with both sides accusing each other of violations in Hodeida province.

The U.N. monitoring team aims to secure the functioning of Hodeida port and supervise the withdrawal of fighters from the city.

Around 10,000 people have been killed since the Saudi-led intervention began, according to the World Health Organization, although rights groups say the death toll could be five times higher.

The conflict has unleashed a major humanitarian crisis and pushed 14 million Yemenis to the brink of famine.

Comments 2
Thumb chrisrushlau 24 December 2018, 19:22

This is a real test of Trump's influence: can he get the UN to make this truce last? Cammaert must have Trump in mind. Cammaert must know that the UN by itself does nothing but consume money and spend lives, not its own. I was all ready to joke that Cammaert had visited the port by drone uplink from his HQ in Bern.

Thumb chrisrushlau 24 December 2018, 19:26

But my joke would have been weak: even a drone camera could give adequate information for truce-monitoring, or at least give him the awareness that this is not a virtual reality wargame. It would be nice if he is honorable and yet not required to resign in disgust after discovering his "bosses" have no intention of making peace. If Trump has sidelined Mohammed bin Salman and brought forth a truly liberal regime in Saudi Arabia, the KSA crusade against Shias will end here (Yemen) and now: today. Yesterday, even, perhaps.