Mikhlafi said his negotiators had submitted proposals to UN envoy Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed for implementing an April 11 ceasefire in Taez, where loyalist troops have been under rebel siege for months, trapping tens of thousands of civilians.
“We received a racist response,” the minister said on Twitter, demanding action from the UN envoy.
He accused the rebels and their allies in renegade army units still loyal to ousted president Ali Abdullah Saleh of “attacks on civilians in Taez”.
The city lies on one of the fault lines of the conflict that has raged since March last year between the rebels and the government and its allies in a Saudi-led military coalition.
It was part of north Yemen before the unification of the country in 1990 but, unlike the capital and the northern mountains where the Huthi Shiite rebels have their main support base, it is overwhelmingly Sunni.
Mikhlafi warned that rebel shelling of Taez would “have serious consequences on the peace process,” unless the international community honours its undertakings to shore up the fragile ceasefire.
The warring parties have traded repeated allegations of truce violations.
The government delegation pulled out of the talks on Sunday in protest at the rebels’ overrunning of one of the few loyalist bases in the northern mountains in what it said was a clear breach.
There has been mounting international pressure to end the conflict that has killed more than 6,400 people and displaced 2.8 million since March last year.
The hard-won talks opened in Kuwait on April 21 but the first round of face-to-face negotiations was held only Saturday.
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