The UN Security Council blamed the Houthis for failing to reach a truce agreement in Yemen, stressing that extremist demands by the Houthis in the final days of talks to extend the truce in Yemen hampered UN efforts to mediate the deal, risking backlash. consequences, stressing the need to prevent a resumption of hostilities inside Yemen, as well as attacks within the region and in the Red Sea.
The members of the Security Council urged the Yemeni parties, especially the Houthis, to refrain from provocations, give priority to the Yemeni people, return to constructive participation in the negotiations under the auspices of the United Nations, and work without delay to extend and expand the truce, expressing their deep disappointment. ceasefire extension in Yemen.
Members said: With the extension of the truce, these benefits for the Yemeni people will continue to grow, including the salaries of teachers, nurses and civil servants in Yemen, the opening of roads in Taiz and throughout the country, the expansion of international flights and making sure that fuel flows more freely to the port Hodeida.
They said that returning to the start of negotiations and restoring the truce is the way to end this war forever and resolve the humanitarian and economic crises in Yemen, noting the heavy losses resulting from the end of the truce, especially to the Yemeni people.
The Council indicated that Ahmed Al-Hamzi, a Yemeni citizen and commander of the Houthi Air and Air Defense Forces, as well as the drone program, was listed for his activities and his role in the Houthi war effort, which directly threaten peace, security and stability in Yemen.
Mansour Al-Saadi, a Yemeni citizen, was also on the UN Security Council Sanctions Committee under Resolution 2140 for his role as chief of staff of the Houthi navy that orchestrated the deadly attacks on international shipping in the Red Sea. seas and also plays a leading role in the Houthi naval efforts that threaten peace, security and stability in Yemen, in addition to Mutlaq Amer Al-Marani, a Yemeni citizen, for his work as the former deputy head of the Houthi National Security Agency (NSS). ), and he directed the detained national security agencies who were subjected to torture and other ill-treatment during their detention, planning and directing them to illegally arrest and detain workers in the Humanitarian Space and illegally divert humanitarian aid in violation of international humanitarian law.