
ADEN – AFP – Dec 08, 2015 – Yemen’s government said Tuesday that the country’s warring sides are preparing to observe a week-long truce from December 15 while UN-mediated peace talks take place in Switzerland.
The United Nations has tried to bring pro-government forces and Iran-backed rebels to the table for months to end a war that has killed thousands and plunged the impoverished nation into a profound humanitarian crisis.
“An agreement on a ceasefire between the government and the Houthis should enter into force on December 15 with the start of negotiations,” Foreign Minister Abdel Malak Al Mekhlafi told AFP.
UN envoy Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed said on Monday that a swift halt to the fighting — which has dramatically escalated since a Saudi-led coalition began bombarding insurgents in March — was imperative for those caught up in the conflict.
Ould Cheikh Ahmed told reporters that three delegations would take part in talks likely to be held outside Geneva and which will last “as long as it takes”.
Talks will focus on four main areas, including the terms for a permanent ceasefire and the withdrawal of armed groups from the areas under their control.
Confidence-building measures will be another area of dialogue, including broadening humanitarian access in the country where aid workers have been killed and kidnapped.
Delegates will finally try to hammer out a political future for Yemen, a country plunged into worsening chaos since the insurgents overran the capital Sanaa and expanded south, forcing the government to flee to Saudi Arabia before it returned to second city Aden last month.
The delegations will include representatives of President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi’s government, the Houthi rebels and officials from the General People’s Congress (GPC), who are loyalists of former president Ali Abdullah Saleh.
A source in Hadi’s cabinet said the truce would last seven days, as specified in a letter sent by Hadi to the UN Security Council.
The agreement reached ahead of talks calls on the rebels to “lift the siege of towns, allow the entry of humanitarian aid and free military and political detainees”, the source said, adding that the truce “will be supervised by the UN and could be extended if respected by the [rebels]”.
The UN envoy said Riyadh has promised to observe the ceasefire and pause its aerial assault on rebel positions during talks.
The truce announcement followed the killing Sunday of the governor of Aden, Jaafar Saad, in an attack claimed by the Daesh terror group, which has threatened further violence.