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Yemen’s Warring Parties Agree To Free More Than 1,000 Prisoners

Giles Clarke/UN OCHA A military guard sits in the former Assembly Hall of the Governor of Saada. Since the Yemen conflict escalated in 2015, much of the city's infrastructure has been destroyed (file photo)

At the end of a week-long meeting in Switzerland, the parties to the conflict in Yemen reached what the UN envoy there called “a very important milestone”, in agreeing to release a first group of detainees.

Delegates from the Yemen Government and the Ansar Allah, formally known as Houthi rebels, signed an agreement on Sunday to liberate 1,081 conflict-related individuals, in accordance with the lists of agreed-upon names.

“Today is an important day for over a thousand families who can expect to welcome back their loved ones hopefully very soon,” said the UN Special Envoy for Yemen, Martin Griffiths, after the fourth meeting of the Supervisory Committee on the Implementation of the Prisoners’ Exchange Agreement, which was co-chaired by his office (OSESGY) and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).

Progress ahead

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The move builds upon a release plan that the parties had reached in Amman last February. And they also agreed to convene a subsequent meeting of the Supervisory Committee with the aim of implementing the remainder of the outcomes of the Amman meeting.

As per the 2018 Stockholm Agreement, the parties renewed their commitment to release all prisoners, detainees, missing persons, arbitrarily detained and forcibly disappeared persons – and those under house arrest.

Moreover, they committed to making efforts to increase the number of prisoners to be released, including those covered by UN Security Council resolutions.

“I thank the parties for going beyond their differences and reaching an arrangement that will benefit Yemenis”, the UN envoy continued, urging the parties to “move forward immediately with the release and to spare no effort in building upon this momentum to swiftly agree to releasing more detainees”.

In doing so, he said, “the UN, they will fulfil their commitments made in Stockholm and put an end to the misery of many more Yemeni families who are waiting for their loved ones”.

Turning commitments into actions

The co-chair, ICRC Regional Director for the Near and Middle East Fabrizio Carboni called the announcement “a positive step for hundreds of detainees and their families back home who have been separated for years and will be reunited soon”.

However, he noted that it marks only the beginning of the process and encouraged parties to continue with “the same urgency” to agree on a concrete implementation plan, “so this operation can move from signatures on paper to reality on the ground’’.

Mr. Griffiths called on the parties “to build on this very important achievement, and to move together towards a negotiated solution to bring lasting peace to Yemen”.

“The United Nations stands ready to support the parties, as well as the Yemeni people, in achieving that”, he assured.

ICRC  Delegates representing the Yemen Government and Ansar Allah with co-chairs of the Supervisory Committee, UN envoy Martin Griffiths (far right) and ICRC Regional Director Fabrizio Carbon (far left), 27 September 2020.

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