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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

UN envoy arrives in Yemen for talks on besieged city

Major General Yahya Abdullah al Razami, chairman of Ansar Allah fighters 'military committee for negotiations", holds a press conference in Sanaa. - AFP
Major General Yahya Abdullah al Razami, chairman of Ansar Allah fighters 'military committee for negotiations", holds a press conference in Sanaa. - AFP
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SANAA: The United Nations special envoy arrived in Yemen on Wednesday for talks on reopening routes to a blockaded city that has proved the thorniest problem in implementing a fragile truce.


Swedish diplomat Hans Grundberg flew into the capital Sanaa, held by the Ansar Allah fighters since 2014, less than a week after the truce was renewed for a second period of two months.


Yemen is witnessing what the UN calls the world's worst humanitarian crisis, seven years into a conflict between the Ansar Allah fighters and a coalition.


Grundberg hailed the truce extension, calling it a "positive signal of the parties' seriousness to uphold and implement the truce".


"Yemenis have seen the truce's tangible benefits. We have witnessed a significant positive shift and we have a responsibility to safeguard it and deliver on its potential for peace in Yemen," he told reporters.


UN special envoy Hans Grundberg
UN special envoy Hans Grundberg


Grundberg said he would meet the leadership to discuss proposals for reopening roads into Taez, Yemen's third biggest city which has been largely cut off since 2015.


"I hope we will have constructive discussions on our proposal for reopening roads in Taez and other governorates, as well as economic and humanitarian measures and the way forward," he said.


Holding talks on Taez was one of the terms of the truce, along with resuming commercial flights out of Sanaa and allowing fuel ships into the lifeline port of Hodeida, which is also in fighters hands. Flights have resumed from Sanaa to Amman and Cairo and tankers have docked in Hodeida in an attempt to ease fuel shortages in Sanaa and elsewhere.


Meanwhile, Greenpeace on Wednesday urged the Arab League to drum up funds to rescue a stranded, oil-filled tanker that is rusting off war-torn Yemen, threatening a major environmental disaster.


The environmental group said an urgent meeting was needed for the FSO Safer, after a UN pledging conference last month fell far short of its $80 million target.


The decaying 45-year-old tanker, long used as a floating storage platform and now abandoned off the rebel-held Yemeni port of Hodeida, holds 1.1 million barrels of oil and is in "imminent" danger of breaking up, the UN has warned.


Ghiwa Nakat, executive director at Greenpeace for the Middle East and North Africa, urged the Arab League's secretary-general "to hold an urgent meeting and make concerted efforts to fund the plan to rescue the Safer before it is too late and before disaster strikes." - AFP


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