Abdul Malik al-Houthi questions Saudi initiative to stop fighting as war escalates

After the initiative announced by Saudi Arabia to end the war and establish peace in Yemen, which included a ceasefire agreement under the supervision of the United Nations, the resumption of political talks and the partial opening of Sanaa International Airport, the spokesman for the Iranian-backed terrorist Houthi militia, Mohammed Abdul Salam, confirmed the readiness of the Houthis for good relations with Saudi Arabia, adding that the Omani mediator was informed of their observations on the Saudi initiative.
Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan bin Abdullah announced
a new peace initiative to end the Yemen war, and the Saudi government called on
the Yemeni parties to accept the plan, explaining that “the Saudi initiative
includes a ceasefire across the country under the supervision of the United
Nations.”
He added
that “the Saudi-led coalition will ease the blockade of Hodeidah port, tax
revenues from the port will go to a joint bank account at the central bank,”
and “it will allow the reopening of Sanaa airport to a specified number of
direct regional and international destinations.”
In another
context, the leader of the Houthi group, Abdul Malik al-Houthi, said in a
speech on the occasion of the National Day of Resilience that “the Americans,
Saudis and some countries tried to persuade us to barter the humanitarian file
for military and political agreements, but we cannot agree to that,” noting
that “the arrival of oil derivatives and food, medical and basic materials is a
human and legal entitlement that cannot be in return for blackmail on military
and political terms.”
He pointed
out that he had not received any official initiative by Saudi Arabia, and that
what was done was a media invitation only, accusing the Kingdom of not being
serious in stopping the war in Yemen.
“If we had
accepted the exploitation of humanitarian files, militarily and politically, it
would be a betrayal of our people, and the enemy would have relied on
justifying their obstruction of reaching humanitarian needs by the occurrence
of any field clash,” he continued.
“The road
to peace is clear. Stop your aggression, end your siege and end your occupation
of our governorates,” he added.
The Houthi
leader expressed his readiness for peace, saying, “We cannot trade off the right
of our people to freedom, independence and dignity, nor their legitimate rights
with access to oil derivatives and human needs.”
“We do not
care about anyone who asks us to be suppressed and surrender to the brutality
of the enemies, and we move as a Yemeni people of all components and classes to
confront the aggression,” he added.
Al-Houthi
concluded his speech by thanking Iran, Hezbollah and its Secretary General
Hassan Nasrallah, and the Sultanate of Oman because they “supported the Yemeni
people in their grievances.”
Regarding
domestic affairs, Al-Houthi expressed dissatisfaction with the government’s
performance, stressing “the continuous pursuit of purification and reform of
state institutions to carry out their duties towards the people,” considering
it a “large and complex responsibility due to the effects of the previous
regime.”
Observers
believe that the Houthis will accept the initiative in principle as an
opportunity to catch a breath after the intensification of their siege in
several Yemeni regions, while others expect that the militia would elude the
initiative by accepting the initiative and then withdrawing from it in the
future.
The Houthis
have intensified attacks on Saudi Arabia with drones and missiles, especially
on oil facilities, and they escalated a ground attack to seize the gas-rich
Marib region. The coalition responded with air strikes on Houthi military
sites.
Saudi
Arabia, the largest ally of the United States in the Middle East, has led since
March 2015 the Arab coalition waging intense military operations in Yemen in
support of the internationally recognized Yemeni government loyal to President
Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi, which has been fighting the Iranian-backed Houthi
forces, who have controlled the capital, Sanaa, since 2014.
After six
years of fighting for power in a conflict that claimed the lives of thousands,
Yemen is witnessing a collapse in the health, economy, education and other
sectors, while more than 3.3 million displaced people live in schools and camps
where diseases such as cholera are spread due to the scarcity of clean water.
The
six-year-old conflict has killed about 130,000 people, including more than
12,000 civilians, according to the United Nations, and it is the worst
humanitarian crisis in the world, in the poorest country in the Arab world.
The
complexity of the humanitarian situation in Yemen is further complicated by
Iran's interference and support for the Houthi militia, which continues to this
day to carry out violations against civilians and innocent people, such as
subjecting many of them to recruitment and fighting on their side against
government forces or imprisoning and torturing them, impeding the work of
relief organizations, and obstructing the access of humanitarian aid to
civilians.