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Yemen tells UN it agrees to conditional truce — gov’t

By Reuters - Jul 09,2015 - Last updated at Jul 09,2015

People check a car damaged by a car bomb attack near a mosque in Yemen’s capital Sanaa on Tuesday (Reuters photo)

DUBAI — Yemen's government told the United Nations on Wednesday it would agree to a truce to end more than three months of fighting provided key "guarantees" were met, spokesman Rajeh Badi said.

"The Yemeni authorities have informed the Secretary General of the United Nations Ban Ki-moon of its agreement to implement a truce in the coming days," Badi told Reuters by phone from the government's seat of exile in Saudi Arabia.

Yemen's President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi, the spokesman said, had "set guarantees for the success of the truce".

These included the release of prisoners by Yemen's dominant Houthi group, including the loyalist defence minister, and the Houthis' withdrawal from four southern and eastern provinces where they are fighting local militias.

Saudi Arabia and an Arab coalition have been bombing the Iran-allied Houthi group and their allies in Yemen's army in an effort to restore Hadi and back armed opponents of the Houthis.

There was no immediate comment from the Houthi movement, which views its takeover of the capital Sanaa last September, and of much of the country since, as a revolution against a corrupt government backed by the West.

The Houthis have not yet accepted a UN Security Council Resolution passed in April which recognises Hadi as the legitimate president and calls on them to quit seized land.

Aid agencies say the fighting and a near-blockade imposed by an alliance of Arab states aimed at weapons deliveries to the Houthis has caused a humanitarian catastrophe, with most people needing some kind of aid.

More than 3,000 people have been killed in the conflict and over a million displaced, and the UN has been urgently pushing for a pause to help impoverished people.

 

“We’re optimistic [the Houthis] will agree, because this will guarantee the sending of aid to Yemenis,” Badi said.

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