UN Envoy Urges Yemeni Warring Parties to Agree on Peace Plan

UN Special Envoy to Yemen Martin Griffiths urged the Yemeni warring parties to accept proposals for a comprehensive ceasefire and launch the political process which enjoys broad international support.
Speaking during a briefing before
the UN Security Council, Griffiths also called on the Iran-backed Houthi group
to immediately stop its drones and ballistic missile attacks against civil facilities
in Saudi Arabia.
He thanked Oman, Saudi Arabia, and
the US for the closely coordinated support they provide to the proposal for a
peaceful settlement and lauded the efforts exerted by US envoy Tim Lenderking
to bridge the divide between the parties.
The international community is
united in its demand to end the war in Yemen, according to Griffiths, who said
that there is a “convergence of diplomatic voices in favor of an end to the war
and its successful political resolution.”
Griffiths said that the priority
is to call for a nationwide ceasefire and launch a “crucial, essential,
unavoidable political process.”
The envoy asserted the “urgency of
progress towards a peaceful settlement makes the continued violence on the
ground... all the more concerning.”
He explained that Marib remains
the major center of gravity in this conflict, and the situation is showing
dangerous signs of escalating once again.
“I am also alarmed by multiple drones and
ballistic missile attacks carried out by Ansar Allah against Saudi territory
but also in Yemeni territory particularly during the past week, including
against civilian facilities.”
The envoy announced that the UN
Mission for Hodeidah Agreement (UNMHA) has been undertaking intensive
discussions on the resumption of the activities under the umbrella of the
Redeployment Coordination Committee.
"In Hodeidah, impediments to the entry of ships
will be lifted, allowing those ships carrying fuel and other crucial
commodities to berth, all of them, and to discharge their cargo," he
added, noting that revenues from the tax on these ships will be put towards
civil service salaries.
“Sana’a airport will see flights to international
and national destinations.”
Speaking at the same meeting, the
Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief
Coordinator, Mark Lowcock, warned that COVID-19 is moving fast, and vaccines
won’t be enough to suppress the second wave.
Lowcock indicated that tens of
thousands of people are already starving to death, with another five million
just a step behind them, indicating that March was the deadliest month for
civilians so far in 2021.
The offensive in Marib is a severe
threat to millions of people, including more than one million internally
displaced persons, indicated Lowcock.
The situation has escalated in
Taiz and Hodeidah again, with heavy civilian casualties.
He announced that regular UN
flights have been approved and will start soon, lauding the efforts of the
Yemeni government and the Coalition “who are working with us to facilitate that.”
For her part, the US
Representative to the UN, Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield, asserted that
diplomacy “can, should, and must end the war in Yemen.”
She welcomed Saudi Arabia’s March
22 announcement of its commitment to reach a ceasefire and engage in inclusive
political talks to help end the conflict.
The envoy also lauded the Yemeni
government’s continued commitment to reaching a ceasefire, urging the Houthis
to respond and to engage productively.
Russian Deputy Permanent
Representative, Dmitry Polyanskiy also welcomed the Saudi initiative to
peacefully resolve the crisis in Yemen, stressing that it is in line with
Griffiths’ plan.