Houthis violate truce in Yemen to reap spoils
The Iranian-backed Houthi militia in Yemen continues its
intransigence against the Arab coalition forces led by Saudi Arabia and the UAE
and against civilians in Yemen, fabricating obstacles to the ceasefire truce
declared on April 24 that is aimed at preparing the appropriate conditions for
the conclusion and success of the UN Special Envoy's efforts to unify Yemen in
order to prevent the spread of the corona virus pandemic.
Broken truce
Yemen’s legitimate government had agreed to a ceasefire, and
after discussing the proposals submitted by the UN envoy and the ambassadors of
the five permanent members of the Security Council, it informed the envoy in
early May 2020 of its approval of the revised version of the ceasefire plan,
which provides for a comprehensive ceasefire and the formation of a committee
to monitor compliance, including representatives of the coalition, the
legitimate government, the Houthi militia, and others from the United Nations.
It also stipulated the formation of a joint unit to manage the corona pandemic,
opening roads between cities and governorates, especially the ports of Taiz,
opening the Sanaa airport for international trips, paying the salaries of all government
employees, releasing all prisoners, and resuming political consultations for a
comprehensive solution.
Houthi violation
The Houthi militia has repeatedly violated the ceasefire and
has continued its terrorist attacks on various fronts, including an attack
against Yemeni army forces in the Harad district, an attack against coalition
forces near al-Hazm, the capital of Al-Jawf governorate, and another in Dhale
governorate. On May 24, coalition forces repelled a Houthi attack near the main
entrance to the city and port of Hodeidah.
Intensive international efforts
UN Envoy Martin Griffiths has led extensive efforts with the
Houthis, the legitimate government, ambassadors of the permanent members of the
Security Council, and those involved in the coalition to support legitimacy,
considering the corona pandemic an opportunity to bring peace to Yemen.
In April, Griffiths announced that three peace proposals
were submitted to the parties to the conflict, including agreements for a
comprehensive ceasefire across Yemen and humanitarian and economic measures,
including prisoner exchanges, opening airports, payment of salaries, and
unifying efforts to confront the corona pandemic, in addition to the urgent
resumption of the political process.
On May 24, Griffiths held a virtual meeting with three
militia negotiators who reiterated their inability to control arms smuggling by
sea or air, as well as for the floating oil tank that eroded due to lack of
maintenance, threatening an environmental catastrophe if the estimated amount
of two million barrels of crude oil contained inside it leaks.
Terrorist barter
The militia is trying to barter with the legitimate
government, the coalition, and the international community by allowing the
maintenance of the floating oil tank in exchange for allowing it to sell the
amount of oil inside it and resuming the pumping of oil from the Marib fields
to the tank. If they do not agree, then the militia will leave the tank to erode
and leak into the sea, which would cause enormous marine pollution.
The Houthis have threatened to escalate attacks against the
legitimate government and coalition forces, evading any serious engagement with
the UN envoy’s efforts aimed at ending the fighting and uniting resources to counter
the spread of the corona virus.
Houthi spokesman and effective Foreign Minister Mohamed
Abdel Salam Fleetah tweeted on May 23 that the Yemeni government and the
coalition supporting it will “regret” continuing their military operations
against the militia, signaling that the terrorist militia would escalate
attacks against them.
Meanwhile, Houthi Deputy Foreign Minister Hussein Al-Ezzi
vowed on Twitter on May 24 to ignite battles on a large scale, claiming that
his group “has run out of patience” and that the coalition operations have “exceeded
the limits”.




