The UN Special Envoy for Yemen told an emergency session of the Security Council on Tuesday that a recent upsurge in violence between pro-Government and rebel forces following weeks of relative calm,
had to end “before it’s too late”.
Martin Griffiths briefed ambassadors in New York behind closed doors, but said in a tweet posted to his office account
that he had “reiterated the importance of stopping the ongoing military escalation…He warned that recent developments
jeopardize the progress the parties had made on de-escalation and confidence-building.”
The renewed fighting between Saudi-led coalition forces and Houthi rebels, formally known as Ansar Allah, has seen air
raids stepped up northeast of the capital Sana’a, leading to many casualties amid fierce fighting, according to news
reports, while rebels have reportedly gone on the offensive in Government-held areas, including a mortar attack which
struck a market in the city of Taiz.
Reports suggest that fighting has escalated in three areas, in Nehm, close to Sana’a, the mountainous district of Jawf
in the north, and the province of Marib, where a missile attack on a Government military base in the middle of January,
reportedly left more than 100 dead.
On Monday, Mr. Griffiths told the Guardian newspaper that “whoever started this renewed violence, it is unequivocally
the case that there has been a huge rupture of confidence and a huge loss of life for the sake of uncertain territorial
gains.”
Yemenis deserve better
He also tweeted that the focus must remain on the impact of nearly five year conflict on the country's long-suffering
civilian population noting that "the Yemeni people deserve better than a life of perpetual war."
The escalation began just days after the Special Envoy had briefed the Security Council with a relatively upbeat
assessment of how Yemen had emerged unscathed during the crisis provoked in the Gulf region by the killing of Iran’s top
general, by the United States.
He said “no major acts of military provocation” had occurred, noting the previous week “had been one of the quietest
weeks of the war in Yemen, since the war began, with only one airstrike, very limited military movement on the ground
and no drone or missile attacks on neighbouring States.”
UNICEF welcomes release of children
Meanwhile, the UN Children’s Fund UNICEF’s representative in Yemen, on Tuesday welcomed the release in Sana’a by Ansar Allah of 64 children allegedly captured
during military operations.
“UNICEF hopes that this step also leads to the signing by the Ansar Allah of