U.N. says Yemen Houthis' redeployment in Hodeidah BRAAKS DOWN Stockholm deal
The United
Nations welcomed on Sunday any redeployment of Yemen's Houthi forces away from
the port city of Hodeidah, but said this should be independently verified to
ensure it is in line with the Stockholm ceasefire agreement.
On Saturday,
the Iranian-aligned movement said it had started to leave the port of the Red
Sea city as part of a U.N.-sponsored ceasefire signed in Sweden this month with
the Saudi-backed government.
The group
said its fighters were withdrawing as specified in the agreement, handing
control to local units of Yemeni coastguards who were in charge of protecting
ports before the war. These will be under U.N. supervision.
But the
Saudi-led military coalition, which intervened in Yemen in 2015 to restore
President Abd-Rabu Mansour Hadi, dismissed the move as it fears that the
coastguards may remain loyal to the Houthi-controlled Sanaa government after
the withdrawal.
"Any
redeployment would only be credible if all parties and the United Nations are
able to observe and verify that it is in line with the Stockholm
Agreement," the United Nations said in a statement.
The United
Nations said on Friday both parties had agreed to begin opening humanitarian
corridors, starting with the key coastal road between Hodeidah and the
Houthi-held capital, Sanaa.
However, it
said in Sunday's statement that the opening did not take place. Retired Dutch
general Patrick Cammaert, the head of a U.N. advance team charged with
monitoring the ceasefire, "expressed his disappointment" in a meeting
with the Houthis at the port of Hodeidah on Saturday.
Houthi
spokesmen could not be reached immediately for a comment.
The
international community has been trying for months to avert an all-out
government assault on Hodeidah, the entry point for most of Yemen’s commercial
goods and aid supplies, and a lifeline for millions of Yemenis on the verge of
starvation.
Under the
Stockholm agreement, both parties agreed on a ceasfire in Hodeidah province and
to withdraw their respective forces.
International
monitors are to be deployed in Hodeidah and a Redeployment Coordination
Committee (RCC) including both sides, chaired by Cammaert, will oversee
implementation. The committee started its meetings this week.
Both parties
are due to present detailed plans for a full redeployment to Cammaert at the
next RCC meeting on Jan. 1, the United Nations said in a statement.