Ceasefire Observers Deploy in Three Yemeni Provinces to Monitor Truce

Local Editor

Local ceasefire monitors arrived at three Yemeni provinces on Wednesday to consolidate a shaky truce, residents and officials said, ahead of U.N.-sponsored peace talks scheduled to start in Kuwait next week.

Over 6,200 people have been killed in a year of fighting between forces loyal to fugitive President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi and the Houthi Ansarullah revolutionaries.

Local officials said teams of 12 monitors were deployed in Marib province east of the capital Sana’a, in southwestern Taiz province and in Hajjah province in the north to try to stop truce violations and allow humanitarian aid to pass through.

The monitors - officers and tribal figures from among the Ansarullah and followers of former president Ali Abdullah Saleh, along with Hadi’s regime - would also try to resolve problems and record complaints of violations and send them to a higher committee working under United Nations supervision.

The deployment comes amid fresh reports of violations by both sides of the truce that began at midnight on Sunday.

Houthi spokesman Mohammed Abdel-Salam had said local committees would be deployed in six provinces where fighting had been taking place. Apart from Marib, Hajjah and Taiz, monitors would also be deployed in Shabwa, al-Bayda and Dalea provinces in southern and central Yemen.

Abdel-Salam, in remarks to the Saudi-owned Asharq al-Awsat newspaper published on Wednesday, said the Houthis regard the truce "as a step towards a complete halt to the war" in Yemen.

Officials say they see the truce as the best chance for Yemen to end a year of fighting.

Previous ceasefire agreements failed to end fighting that began in March last year.

Saudi Arabia and the Ansarullah movement have observed a period of calm along their common border since last month, paving the way for the truce to be reached.

U.N.-sponsored peace talks are set to begin on April 18 in Kuwait, bringing together the Asarullah movement and the Saudi-backed regime.

Source: News Agencies, Edited by Website Team