Hodeidah Residents Fear Yemen Violence Will Rupture Ceasefire

By Bethan Mckernan

Residents and aid workers in the besieged Yemeni city of Hodeida fear that growing violence in the city will rupture the fragile ceasefire, despite insistences from the UN that both sides remain committed to negotiating the end of the four-year-old civil war.

The Saudi-led coalition fighting Houthi revolutionaries … in control of the city sparked fears of escalation this week after UAE foreign minister Anwar Gargash said it struck 10 Houthi training camps elsewhere in the country….

The coalition is “prepared to used more calibrated force,” he said.

Inside Hodeida itself, several fighters on both sides of the conflict were injured in sustained clashes over the last three days, resident Manal al-Osabi said. Artillery shelling has rocked frontline areas in southern and eastern neighborhoods where the coalition advance was frozen ahead of peace talks in Sweden in December.

“The ceasefire has collapsed, as far as I see it, but no one has the courage to say that,” she said. “At this point people are dying on a daily basis for the sake of a dead agreement.”

Six weeks into a ceasefire designed to save Hodeida’s vital port, through which the majority of food, aid and fuel to the country to the famine-stricken country flows, scant progress has been made on the measures agreed in Stockholm.

The 7 January deadline for the pullback of troops has slipped and a prisoner swap derailed ….

Aid workers say many families in Hodeida are now sifting through rubbish for food and medical supplies remain in short supply after the city’s only functioning hospital was affected by the fighting before the 13 December ceasefire came into effect.

“The ceasefire is there on paper, but otherwise it’s more or less in [UN special envoy] Martin Griffiths’ head,” said one source close to the peace process.

Griffiths briefed the UN security council in a closed-doors meeting on Thursday on new efforts to facilitate an off-shore meeting of ex-regime and Houthi representatives to discuss the withdrawal of fighters and redeployment of a UN-monitored security force in Hodeida….

The coalition fighting to restore the resigned regime … of the former Yemeni president, Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi, believes retaking Hodeida will clear a path to seizing the capital, Sana’a, from the Houthis, but the Houthis have proved consistently more difficult to dislodge than Riyadh anticipated.

The UK, among other western governments, has been criticized for fuelling the conflict by selling arms to the coalition.

A report released this week by Control Arms UK criticized Westminster for authorizing 18,107 open license deliveries of arms and equipment to Saudi Arabia for use in Yemen since the war broke out in 2015, without disclosing to the public the quantities or value involved.

While the official UN death toll in the conflict has stalled at 10,000, monitors say the true figure stands at between 50,000 and 80,000 people, killed by violence, malnutrition and the worst cholera outbreak in modern history.

Source: The Guardian, Edited by Website Team