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Thursday, May 16, 2024

Yemeni official: The ceasefire does not make sense without the reopening of the ports

Pak Sahafat – The Yemeni Deputy Prime Minister for Defense and Security said on Saturday night regarding the extension of the two-month UN ceasefire in his country that the continuation of the ceasefire without reopening ports, paying salaries, reopening airports is baseless and the Yemeni people are in Egypt to assert their rights.

According to Pak Sahafat News Agency, Addressing the aggressor countries, General Jalal al-Rawishan told Yemen’s Al-Masira network that if the aggression continues to be violated by the aggressor countries and they do not commit to the ceasefire, we will not lose anything.

He further emphasized: The Yemeni nation cannot accept the violated ceasefire, although our nation and our armed forces do not rely on this ceasefire and the credibility of the aggressors.

The Yemeni official said that the focus of his country’s forces in accepting the ceasefire is to alleviate the suffering of the Yemeni people, and added that the aggressor countries have not adhered to the ceasefire properly, and our nation knows this very well.

Al-Rawishan stated that the aggressor coalition has proved that it does not adhere to any convention or agreement.

Read more:

Continued violation of the Yemeni ceasefire by the Saudi coalition

He added that the world is witnessing that the passengers of Sanaa Airport are sick, elderly, women and children, and this is a proof of the validity of our request to reopen the airport.

Al-Rawishan’s assertion that the Saudi coalition violated the ceasefire comes days after UN special envoy to Yemen Hans Grundberg said Tuesday night: “Despite the escalation of the war, we have received reports of ceasefire violations by the parties to the conflict.

The UN envoy for Yemen announced a two-month extension of the ceasefire in Yemen on 12 June.

At the suggestion of the United Nations, a two-month ceasefire was established in Yemen on April 2nd (April 13th), the most important of which was the entry of 18 fuel-carrying ships into the ports of Al-Hudaidah and the permission of two weekly round-trip flights from Sanaa Airport.

Following the end of the ceasefire, which has been repeatedly violated by the Saudi aggression coalition, UN consultations began to renew it, and finally the UN Special Envoy for Yemen announced on June 3 that an agreement had been reached to extend it for two months.

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