Houthi Violations in Hodeidah Threaten to Collapse Stockholm Agreement

Fears of the UN-sponsored Stockholm Agreement collapsing between the internationally recognized government of Yemen and Iran-backed Houthi militias have resurfaced with the latter stepping up attacks against civilians in recent days.
Yemeni government sources have
raised the alarm on the fragile deal falling apart in the port city of
Hodeidah, labeling the situation as “very dangerous.”
The UN Security Council and the
international community need to reassess the status of the UN mission stationed
in Hodeidah, sources told Asharq Al-Awsat, explaining that the peacekeeping
taskforce has been taken “hostage” by Houthis.
Last September, the Yemeni
government suspended its participation in all meetings with the UN Mission to
support the Hodeidah Agreement (UNMHA) and conditioned its return with the
replacement of UNMHA Head Lt. Gen. Abhijit Guha.
Guha had succeeded Lt.Gen. Michael
Lollesgaard in October 2019. He also chairs the Redeployment Coordination
Committee (RCC) in Hodeidah.
“Two years have passed since inking the
Stockholm Agreement and the situation of the UN mission in Hodeidah is very
bad. It was unable to achieve anything,” Yemeni government spokesperson Rajeh
Badi told Asharq Al-Awsat.
“It (UNMHA) became a hostage of the Houthi
militia,” Badi added, explaining that the UN body is greatly influenced by
Houthi orders and is unable to take any action that could potentially anger the
Iran-aligned group.
Houthi militias, on Saturday,
launched a round of Katyusha rockets that targeted government-run areas and
residential complexes in Hodeidah’s al-Manzhar neighborhood. In the attack,
al-Qassimi mosque was destroyed.
The Yemeni Foreign Ministry, for
its part, repeated its call to the international community and the UN to
condemn the Houthi attacks on Marib, government-controlled areas in Hodeidah
and Saudi Arabia, stressing that the Houthis are contradicting their commitments
to peace initiatives and previous agreements.
“Houthi violations in Hodeidah and attacks on
Marib, which is a shelter for millions of internally displaced people fleeing
Houthi oppression, coincide with their continued targeting of Saudi Arabia. It
all confirms again how Houthis don’t care about agreements and seeking peace,”
the ministry said in a statement on Sunday.
Yemen’s Foreign Ministry repeated
its call to the international community and the UN to condemn Houthi attacks on
Marib, Hodeidah and Saudi Arabia.
“Houthi violations in Hodeidah and attacks on
Marib, which is a shelter for millions of internally displaced people fleeing
Houthi oppression, coincide with their continued targeting of Saudi Arabia,”
the ministry said.
“It confirms again that the
Houthis don’t care about agreements and seeking peace,” it affirmed.