Yemeni peace process asks for increased UN Security Council attention

 


On Wednesday, the UN Security Council heard appeals for enhanced efforts to secure a more robust and long-lasting ceasefire in Yemen that will help put an end to the conflict and lessen the country's humanitarian suffering.

The UN's special envoy to Yemen, Hans Grundberg, said during the most recent meeting to discuss the situation there that a truce that had been agreed to a year earlier had helped the nation achieve some measure of stability and economic recovery.

But it's still precarious, he said, and the intermittent violence that keeps breaking out in different areas fuels instability.

Despite these violations, the UN-mediated cease-fire between the Yemeni government's forces and the Houthi militias, who are supported by Iran and are in control of much of the nation, including the capital Sanaa, has resulted in the longest period of peace since the conflict started in 2014.

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