IQNA

Situation in Yemen’s Hudaydah ‘Very Disturbing’: Russia’s UN Envoy

14:49 - June 19, 2018
News ID: 3466115
TEHRAN (IQNA) – The UN spokesman said Monday that tens of thousands of residents have fled the fighting along Yemen's western coastline where the Saudi-led coalition’s forces and mercenaries are engaged in fierce battles with Yemen’s army and Houthi Ansarullah movement’s fighters.

  

Stephane Dujarric, the spokesman for the UN Secretary-General, told reporters that about 5,200 families, or around 26,000 people, have fled the fighting and sought safety within their own districts or in other areas in Hudaydah governorate. 

"The number is expected to increase as hostilities continue," he said. 

The UN Security Council again reiterated its call for the Houthi-held ports of Hudaydah and Salif "to be kept open and operating safely" in a press statement issued after closed door briefings by UN Special Envoy for Yemen Martin Griffiths and UN humanitarian chief Mark Lowcock. 

Russia's deputy UN ambassador, Dmitry Polyansky, whose country holds the rotating Security Council presidency this month, told reporters that Griffiths confirmed the ports continue to operate, AP reported. 

The Saudi-led coalition and its mercenaries began a massive operation on Wednesday to bring Yemen’s port city under their control. 

The United States, Britain and France have backed the coalition in the Yemen conflict and keep providing weapons to both Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. 

The attacks to seize control of Hodeida threatens to worsen Yemen's humanitarian situation, as Hudaydah's port is the country's main entry point for most humanitarian aid. 

"The situation is very disturbing," Polyansky said. "We all hope that nothing terrible will happen further in Hudaydah. That is our shared analysis of the situation." 

The offensive for Hudaydah has faced criticism from international aid groups, who fear a protracted fight could force a shutdown of the city's port and potentially tip millions into starvation. Some 70 percent of Yemen's food enters via the port, as well as the bulk of humanitarian aid and fuel supplies. Around two-thirds of the country's population of 27 million relies on aid and 8.4 million are already at risk of starving. 

Griffiths, the UN envoy, arrived in Yemen on Saturday to try to avoid an all-out assault in Hudaydah. He briefed the Security Council by video from Sanaa on his proposals to restart political negotiations to end the three-year conflict in Yemen. 

The statement from Security Council members said they welcomed his briefing on the proposals, "reaffirmed their full support for his efforts and underlined that a political solution remained the only way to end the conflict in Yemen." 

Polyansky said it was very difficult to talk about a timeframe for the political proposals. 

"The political moves that are being proposed are being supported by us ... but the situation is now very volatile," he said. "We hope that he will succeed. ... but let's wait some time and see what will come of it."

 

Tags: iqna ، yemen ، hudaydah ، UN
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