Saudi Arabia Proposes 5-Day Yemen Ceasefire

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

Saudi Arabia on Thursday proposed a five-day humanitarian ceasefire in Yemen after weeks of air strikes and clashes, with top U.S. diplomat John Kerry urging Iran-backed rebels to accept the offer.

The bombing by a Saudi-led coalition has failed to halt an advance by the Shiite Huthi rebels in Yemen, and concern has been mounting over increasing civilian deaths.

Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir announced the ceasefire proposal after talks in Riyadh with Kerry, who described it as a "major opportunity" to ease the humanitarian crisis.

Jubeir said he had informed Kerry of "the kingdom's idea of a five-day ceasefire in Yemen to coordinate with international organizations to deliver aid to Yemen".

But he said it would only apply "if the Huthis and their allies commit to this and do not carry out acts of aggression".

A date for the ceasefire, "will soon be set," he said at a joint news conference with the U.S. secretary of state, who earlier held talks with King Salman.

"This ceasefire is conditioned on Huthis", Kerry said, appealing to the rebels and their backers "to use all their influence not to miss this major opportunity to address the needs of the Yemeni people and find a peaceful way forward".

The call coincided with a renewed U.N. plea for a humanitarian pause in Yemen, where weeks of war have now killed more than 1,400 people and injured nearly 6,000 -- many of them civilians.

"I repeat my call for a humanitarian pause, to be observed by all parties, to allow civilians to escape conflict areas and access basic services, and to enable humanitarian agencies to provide life-saving assistance," said the U.N.'s humanitarian coordinator for Yemen, Johannes van der Klaauw.

Kerry said during his Riyadh talks there was no discussion about sending troops into Yemen, although Yemen's exiled government has appealed for action on the ground.

"We urge the international community to quickly intervene by land forces to save Yemen, especially Aden and Taez," Yemen's U.N. mission said a letter to the U.N. Security Council.

Coalition air strikes and weapons drops have been supporting fighters loyal to President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi, who fled to Saudi Arabia as the rebels advanced on his southern refuge in the port city of Aden where intense combat continues.

Hadi supporters are battling the Huthis, who have seized large parts of the country including the capital Sanaa. The Huthis are allied with troops loyal to ex-president Ali Abdullah Saleh.

After arriving in Riyadh on Wednesday, Kerry met the powerful Crown Prince Mohammed bin Nayef.

On Thursday he also held talks with Hadi, now based in the Saudi capital.

"The United States remains deeply concerned about the situation on the ground in Yemen and we fully support efforts to facilitate the unimpeded delivery of humanitarian aid," said Kerry.

The U.N.'s new Yemen envoy, Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed, was also in Riyadh Thursday in a bid to relaunch peace talks.

On Wednesday, 38 people were reported to have died while trying to flee Aden by sea.

A health official accused the rebels of killing the civilians and wounding another 95 in the shelling of a fishing harbor and a barge.

The U.N.'s van der Klaauw said he was "gravely concerned by reports coming out of Aden yesterday".

As well as the growing civilian death toll from the air campaign and fighting, deliveries of fuel, food and medicine have been severely crippled in the impoverished Arabian Peninsula nation.

In Saudi Arabia the war hit home for a third day on Thursday.

State television, citing a civil defense official, said shells landed in an uninhabited part of the Najran border district, where bombardments killed several people this week.

A Saudi helicopter gunship made an emergency landing in Najran, a Saudi official said, ruling out hostile fire.

Iran has dismissed as "utter lies" accusations it armed the Huthis but Jubeir on Thursday said Tehran's support for the rebels includes weapons.

Kerry accused Iran of "destabilizing actions" in the region, and said it should not be allowed to have a nuclear weapon.

He was seeking to reassure the Saudis over an international agreement being drafted to limit Iran's nuclear capabilities in return for a lifting of international sanctions.

Comments 7
Thumb the_roar 07 May 2015, 16:25

But texas & many m14ers told us it was over last week?
apparently the rebels had surrendered unconditionally .

Oh well, looks like they lied once again.

lol@m14ers..will they ever get anything right?

Thumb Mystic 07 May 2015, 16:57

Saudis used up all their bombs and missiles, now they need sometime to resupply.

Thumb Mystic 07 May 2015, 17:10

Another reason here for the Saudis to want a ceasefire.
They got a few greetings from the Yemeni people -

http://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2015/05/07/409873/Yemen-Saudi-Najran-airstrikes-rocket-Hadi-Houthi-Ansarullah-Saada

Missing peace 07 May 2015, 16:58

none of lebanese business but it seems to be M8ers ones... i guess the defense of Lebanon goes though yemen now! LOL @hem

Thumb freedomarch 07 May 2015, 20:06

Jounieh is Aden and Aden is Jounieh! NASROOLAH is winning all over, just wait and see assad of syria to be in beirut and Iran taking over Syria.. FT and my stick knows it is near....

Thumb Mystic 07 May 2015, 18:40

You are a funny guy texas, making up your own conclusions to explain everything in your way. Wouldn't be the first time you did that.

Thumb EagleDawn 07 May 2015, 20:04

why every time you people can't successfully refute @FT, you accuse him of being sectarian? I've been reading this forum for years and I've never managed to know what is @FT's religion. sometimes I think he's christian, sometimes, Huthi. so I stopped guessing. It's people like you, who are sectarian, FT is pure Huthi.