National News

Yemen’s Hadi threatens to boycott peace talks

ADEN, July 10, (APP/AFP) – Yemeni President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi threatened Sunday to boycott peace talks with rebels if the UN envoy
insists on a roadmap stipulating a unity government that includes the
insurgents.
UN-sponsored talks between Hadi’s government and the Huthi rebels
and their allies are scheduled to resume on Friday in Kuwait after a
two-week break.
More than two months of negotiations have failed to make headway to end the deadly conflict.
“We will not return to the talks in Kuwait if the United Nations tries to impose the latest proposal by mediator Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed,” Hadi said during a visit to inspect troops in Marib province, east of the rebel-held capital.
Ould Cheikh Ahmed has put forward a peace roadmap that would see
the formation of a unity government and the withdrawal and disarmament of the rebels.
He said the negotiators had welcomed his proposal but had not agreed a timetable or the steps needed to implement it.
The government had already expressed doubts this month about the UN-backed efforts.
Hadi’s government wants to re-establish its authority across the entire country, much of which is rebel-controlled, and restart a political transition interrupted when the Huthis seized Sanaa in 2014.
The rebels have conditioned their withdrawal on both sides agreeing on a new president to manage the transition.
In his speech, published on the official sabanew.net website, Hadi insisted that the rebels were using the Kuwait talks to “legitimise their coup d’etat”, and rejected the UN proposal for a unity government.
“The UN has tried to convince us to form a coalition government. We said we would issue a statement declaring our boycott of the Kuwait consultations,” Hadi said.
In February last year the Huthis dissolved the government and parliament and formed their own Supreme Revolutionary Committee to rule Yemen.
Ould Cheikh Ahmed has urged both sides to make concessions to end the
conflict, which has cost more than 6,400 lives since March 2015 when a
Saudi-led coalition intervened to push back the rebels.