Saudi-led coalition seeks UN support on Yemen rebels

Update: 2015-04-15 23:34 GMT
The draft UN Security Council resolution put forward by Jordan and Gulf countries could be blocked by veto-wielding Russia which has friendly relations with Iran, an ally of the Shiite Huthi rebels. It comes as fears grow of a humanitarian crisis in the impoverished country, which has sunk deeper into violence and chaos since the coalition launched an air war on the Huthis and allied rebel troops on March 26.

A military source said armed tribesmen had seized control of Yemen’s only gas export terminal in Balhaf in the southern province of Shabwa on Tuesday and had vowed to secure the site after soldiers assigned to protect it surrendered.

The terminal’s operator Yemen LNG, in which France’s Total has a stake of almost 40 percent, said it had stopped production at the facility due to a “force majeure”. But a Total spokesman said Yemen LNG still controlled the terminal and that the perimeter had not been breached.

A local official said the dead bodies of 15 soldiers from an army brigade guarding Balhaf and oil pipelines in Shabwa were found on the outskirts of the provincial capital Ataq.

It was unclear who killed them. The draft UN resolution is the first formal measure to come up for a vote in the Security Council since the start of the Saudi-led bombing raids.

The campaign by Saudi Arabia and a coalition of five Gulf monarchies along with Egypt, Jordan,
Morocco and Sudan has so far failed to stop the rebel advance.

The draft resolution, obtained by AFP, demands that the Huthis withdraw from the capital Sanaa and all other areas they have seized. 

Iran minister calls for peace plan
Iran’s foreign minister on Tuesday called for a peace plan for war-torn Yemen that includes humanitarian aid, dialogue and the formation of a broad-based Yemeni government after a proposed cease-fire already rejected by Saudi Arabia.

Saudi Arabia has been carrying out airstrikes in Yemen against the Houthi rebels who control the capital, Sanaa. Foreign Minister Javad Zarif said no preconditions as to who would run Yemen can be imposed before dialogue begins with the country’s different factions, because doing so “will prolong the disaster.”

Similar News