Monday, 18 April 2016
Yemen peace talks delayed with rebels still in Sanaa
The start of UN-brokered peace talks in Kuwait between Yemen’s Iran-
backed rebels and the government was delayed on Monday as the
insurgent delegation was yet to arrive, an official source said.
“Until now we don’t have information except that the (rebel) Huthi
delegation is late,” a source close to the government delegation in Kuwait
City told AFP.
“They haven’t left Sanaa and are procrastinating,” the source said, adding
that the start of talks had been pushed back.
In the rebel-held capital, a source from the Huthis’ political bureau
confirmed to AFP that the rebels had not left Sanaa.
Representatives of the internationally-recognised government as well as
the Huthis and their allies — loyalists of former president Ali Abdullah
Saleh — were supposed to gather in Kuwait on Monday for a new round of
peace negotiations.
The talks are taking place after a ceasefire came into effect one week ago
but was repeatedly violated.
UN envoy Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed arrived Sunday in Kuwait, where he
spoke of “much tension” still gripping the war-torn country, KUNA news
agency reported.
But briefing the UN Security Council on Friday, Cheikh Ahmed said
Yemen had “never been so close to peace”.
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