Yemen’s Houthis ready for talks if air strikes stop: senior member

Reuters: Yemen’s Houthis are ready to sit down for peace talks as long as a Saudi-led air campaign is halted and the negotiations are overseen by “non-aggressive” parties, a senior Houthi member said.

Saleh al-Sammad, who was an adviser to President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, also told Reuters in emailed answers that Yemenis reject the return of Hadi, who escaped to Saudi Arabia after Shi’ite Houthi fighters edged closer to his southern base of Aden last month.

Warplanes and ships from a Saudi-led coalition have been bombing the Iran-allied Houthi forces for 11 days, saying they are trying drive back the Houthis and restore Hadi. U.N. brokered peace talks in the preceding weeks between Hadi and the Houthis had failed.

“We still stand by our position on dialogue and we demand its continuation despite everything that has happened, on the basis of respect and acknowledging the other,” Sammad said.

“We have no conditions except a halt to the aggression and sitting on the dialogue table within a specific time period … and any international or regional parties that have no aggressive positions towards the Yemeni people can oversee the dialogue,” Sammad said, without specifying who they might be.

Reuters: Yemen’s Houthi militiamen, supported by army units, gained ground in the southern city of Aden on Sunday, pushing back loyalists of the Saudi-backed President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi.

Residents took refuge in their homes and reported hearing sporadic gunfire and blasts of rocket-propelled grenades, and one witness saw a Houthi tank in the downtown Mualla district, which sits astride Aden’s main commercial port.

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2 thoughts on “Yemen’s Houthis ready for talks if air strikes stop: senior member

  1. Don Graham

    Isn’t Aden were the Cole was based?

    I presume the US still has a major presence there yet no one seems to be reporting on it or our participation in the conflicts since withdrawing our special forces operatives last month.

    Self-censorship?

  2. Paul Woodward

    For those willing to make the effort, you’d be amazed how much information you can find in Wikipedia.

    USS Cole is based in Norfolk, Virginia and at the time that it was bombed was merely stopping in Aden for refueling.

    No, the U.S. does not have a major presence in Aden — no need. It has Camp Lemonnier in Djibouti, the other side of the Gulf of Aden.

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