UN council authorizes monitors for truce at key Yemen port
The U.N. Security Council voted unanimously Friday to authorize the deployment of U.N. monitors to observe the implementation of a cease-fire in Yemen’s key port of Hodeida and the withdrawal of rival forces from that area.
The limited cease-fire and pullout, if implemented, could offer a potential breakthrough in the four-year civil war that has brought the Arab world’s poorest country to the brink of starvation and created the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.
The U.N. envoy for Yemen, Martin Griffiths, had urged rapid deployment of U.N. monitors as “an essential part of the confidence” needed to help implement the Dec. 13 cease-fire agreement between Yemen’s government and Houthi Shiite rebels reached in Stockholm, Sweden. The pact also calls for the “phased but rapid mutual withdrawals” of fighters from the port and city of Hodeida as well as two other smaller ports in the province.
Britain’s U.N. Ambassador Karen Pierce, whose country sponsored the resolution, praised the council’s unanimity “on this very important issue that affected so many millions of citizens in Yemen today.”


