Delegates from the Houthi Ansarullah movement at the fresh round of Yemeni peace talks in Kuwait have described political dialog as the only way out of the conflict in the violence-wracked Arab state.
During a meeting with Kuwaiti Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Sheikh Sabah al-Khalid Hamad al-Sabah in Kuwait City on Sunday, the envoys underlined the need for the continuation of the UN-backed peace negotiations until they lead to a comprehensive political solution, al-Masirah reported.
They said Ansarullah has been maintaining a clear and transparent position concerning the formation of a new Yemeni legislature and administration ever since the intra-Yemeni negotiations started on April 21.
They also said the movement calls for the resolution of obstacles in the path of the talks, as well as the immediate cessation of Saudi Arabia’s military aggression against Yemen.
The Ansarullah representatives further stressed that they have never hesitated to engage in the talks, flatly rejecting excuses and threats being made by Saudi-backed negotiators against them.
The delegates also emphasized the need for an immediate end to the Saudi naval and air embargo imposed on Yemen.
The deputy Kuwaiti prime minister, for his part, expressed hope that the two sides to Yemen’s peace talks could reach a final agreement to restore peace in the crisis-hit Arab country and alleviate the sufferings of the Yemeni nation.
The UN-mediated negotiations aimed at resolving the conflict in Yemen have resumed in Kuwait City after a 15-day hiatus.
The peace talks, which started on April 21, were held against the backdrop of a shaky ceasefire that had taken effect on April 10.
Car bomb attack
Separately, at least nine militiamen loyal to Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi — who has resigned as Yemen’s president — have been killed and tens of others wounded in car bomb attacks at a security checkpoint on the outskirts of the southern port city of Mukalla, situated some 900 kilometers (559 miles) southeast of the Yemeni capital.
Yemen has been under military strikes by Saudi Arabia since March 26, 2015. The Saudi war has been meant to restore power to Hadi, who has resigned as Yemen’s president but seeks to forcefully return.
The Houthi Ansarullah fighters took over state matters after the resignation and escape of Hadi from the capital, Sana’a.
The Saudi attacks, meanwhile, continue against Yemen despite the ceasefire.
At least two civilians lost their lives and 14 others sustained injuries on Monday when Saudi fighter jets carried out airstrikes against a residential area in al-Mukha district of the southwestern Yemeni province of Ta’izz.