15 April 2019
Plan for troop pullback ‘now accepted’ by rival forces around key Yemen port, but fighting intensifying elsewhere,
Security Council warned
OCHA/Giles Clarke
Children walk through a damaged part of downtown Craiter in Aden, Yemen. The area was badly damaged by airstrikes in
2015 as the Houthi’s were driven out of the city by coalition forces.
A plan to withdraw forces from front lines in and around the key Yemeni port of Hudaydah has been accepted by
pro-Government forces and Houthi rebels, the UN Special Envoy to the country told the Security Council on Monday,
warning however that war shows “no sign of abating” elsewhere.
Martin Griffiths said that after a “long and difficult process” agreeing the details of a UN-backed plan, which the warring parties signed up to in Sweden last December to de-escalate fighting around Hudaydah, as the start of a process to hopefully end the fighting
nationwide, “both parties have now accepted the detailed redeployment plan for phase one”, and the UN was now “moving
with all speed towards resolving the final outstanding issues”.
He said the breakthrough would mark the “first voluntary withdrawals of forces in this long conflict”, noting that
violence had “significantly reduced” around the Red Sea port city, which is the entry point for the vast majority of aid
and goods for the whole country, since the fragile ceasefire began.
Mr. Griffiths told Council members he was committed to helping facilitate a political solution to end the war: “My
primary responsibility in the next few weeks will be to winnow down differences between the parties so that when they
meet they can, in all efficiency, be asked to answer precise questions about the nature of the arrangements to end the
war”, he said.
“I seek the support of this Council for this approach. I ask you to put your faith in the desperate need for peace which
is the daily prayer of the millions of Yemenis who still believe in its prospect.
ends