Yemen government leaves Kuwait talks after Houthis reject UN plan

T-Mag Monday 01/August/2016 20:18 PM
By: Times News Service
Yemen government leaves Kuwait talks after Houthis reject UN plan

Dubai: Yemeni government negotiators said they were leaving peace talks in Kuwait on Monday after Houthi militia rejected a United Nations proposal aimed to ending their country's war.
Foreign Minister Abdel Malek Al Mekhlafi insisted the government was not abandoning the peace process, but suggested it would only return if the Houthis and a powerful local ally lifted their objections to the UN plan.
"We've agreed to the initiative... we are now leaving the territory of the brotherly state of Kuwait but we're not leaving the talks," Mekhlafi said while announcing the move.
"We'll return at any moment, even an hour after our departure, if the other side agrees to sign this document which the (UN) envoy presented."
UN envoy Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed proposed that the government's foes in the armed Houthi movement quit three main cities they hold, including the capital Sanaa. Under this plan, new talks would then be convened on forming a government that would include the Houthis, delegates said.
The Houthis dismissed the proposal as a non-starter on Sunday, saying in a statement that any agreement would need to be comprehensive and not postpone a resolution on major issues.
They said they would stay in Kuwait for the talks.
The negotiations started in April have slowed the nationwide fighting that has killed at least 6,400 people and caused one of the world's worst humanitarian crises.
Meanwhile, four people were killed and three wounded in Saudi Arabia when a shell fired from inside Yemen exploded in a town close to the border, Saudi civil defence said on Monday.
The shell hit Samtah, in the southwestern Saudi border region of Jizan, a tweet by the Saudi civil defence said.
Seven Saudi soldiers and dozens of Houthi fighters were killed in heavy fighting on the border with Yemen on Sunday.
Saudi Arabia has reported dozens of its soldiers or civilians have been killed in the conflict.