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Yemen rebels say hope to attend UN-brokered peace talks

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AFP Dubai

Yemen's Huthi rebels have said they will attend UN-brokered peace talks next week in Sweden if guarantees to ensure they can leave home and return back are maintained.

"I think that the national (Huthi) delegation will be in Sweden God willing on December 3 if guarantees remain to ensure they can depart and return," Mohammed Ali al-Huthi said on Twitter on Thursday.

Huthi, who heads the rebels' Higher Revolutionary Committee, said there should also be "positive indications on the importance of peace from the other side".

His remarks offered the first clear indication that the Iran-linked Huthis will attend the UN-brokered peace talks, although in past days they have said they supported the negotiations.

 

It was also the first time that a key player in the Yemen war specified a date for the talks which the United Nations has said it would begin in early December in Sweden.

In September, a previous round of UN-led peace talks failed when the Huthis refused to travel to Geneva, accusing the world body of failing to guarantee their delegation's return to Sanaa or secure the evacuation of wounded rebels to Oman.

Previous talks broke down in 2016, when 108 days of negotiations in Kuwait failed to yield a deal and left rebel delegates stranded in Oman for three months.

The Huthi's top political leader Mahdi al-Mashat confirmed in a statement published by the rebels' news agency later Thursday that their negotiating team was ready to head to Sweden.

He called for a reduction in hostilities ahead of the talks and said rebels were exercising "high levels of self-restraint".

Yemen's internationally recognised government, which is also backed by a Saudi-led military coalition, has already said it would attend the planned talks in Sweden.

President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi in a statement to mark Yemen's Independence Day insisted the government was committed to peace and not "calling for war".

Despite the latest calls for peace, both government and rebel media reported ongoing clashes across the country.

UN envoy Martin Griffiths has held talks separately in the past few days with officials from both sides as part of efforts to lay the ground work for the peace talks.

He met Huthi in the rebel-held Yemeni capital Sanaa and had talks with Yemeni officials in Saudi Arabia's capital Riyadh.

According to UN figures, nearly 10,000 people have been killed since the coalition joined the conflict in 2015 to bolster Hadi, triggering what the UN calls the world's worst humanitarian crisis.

Rights groups fear the actual toll is far higher.

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First Published: Nov 30 2018 | 2:25 AM IST

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