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Reuters: The Saudi-Omani delegation is going to Sana’a to reach a permanent ceasefire in Yemen

Pak Sahafat – The Reuters news agency announced the visit of a Saudi-Omani delegation to Yemen‘s capital Sana’a next week with the aim of reaching a permanent ceasefire agreement in this country.

According to Pak Sahafat News Agency’s report, Reuters news agency quoted two informed sources and wrote that a Saudi-Omani delegation is planning to visit Sana’a next week in hopes of reaching an agreement and a permanent ceasefire in Yemen.

The two informed sources said: The talks between the Saudi and Omani delegation in Sana’a will focus on the full reopening of Yemen’s ports and airports, paying employees’ salaries and the political transfer of power.

Sputnik news agency also quoted a Yemeni source as saying that The new ceasefire may contain several points, including the resumption of oil exports from oil fields in the south and Marib in the north, the lifting of all restrictions on Hodeidah port, the expansion of flights to Sana’a airport, and the opening of all routes between areas controlled by the National Salvation Government of Yemen and the parts that are under the control of forces loyal to the resigned and fugitive government of Yemen.

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Last Thursday, the United Nations stated that the Yemeni people need a comprehensive peace to end their suffering as a result of the eight-year war in their country.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees announced in a statement that eight years of war forced four million and 500 thousand Yemenis, 74% of whom are women and children, to flee and increased poverty, now two-thirds of Yemenis live below the poverty line.

After the Yemeni people’s revolution, since September 2014, the armed forces and popular committees affiliated with the National Salvation Government of Yemen have taken control of most of the central and Northern provinces of Yemen, including Sana’a, the capital of this country.

On March 26, 2015, the Arab coalition led by Saudi Arabia began its military operation in support of the resigned and fugitive Yemeni government to retake the mentioned areas from the control of the National Salvation Government of Yemen.

Meanwhile, according to the UN report, the current war in Yemen has killed 377,000 people by the end of 2021 and caused a lot of damage to the country’s economy, which is estimated at about 126 billion dollars, and now 80% of Yemeni people need humanitarian aid.

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