Warring parties in Yemen must fully respect Hudaydah ceasefire: UN.

GENEVA -- The United Nations Security Council on Friday endorsed the agreement reached between the Government of Yemen and leaders of the opposition Houthi movement, at the recent UN-backed talks in Sweden, and authorized the deployment of an advance team to facilitate the monitoring and implementation of the Stockholm Agreement.

That ground-breaking agreement, following the first talks between the warring parties in more than two years, includes a ceasefire in and around the vital port city of Hudaydah - the conduit for nearly 80 per cent of Yemen's life-saving food, medical aid and fuel. The truce entered into force on 18 December.

Unanimously adopting resolution 2451 (2018), the Council "insisted" that all parties fully respect the ceasefire agreed for Hudaydah governorate as well as the commitment to redeploy their forces away from Hudaydah city and the port areas, to agreed locations outside, "within 21 days of the ceasefire coming into force."

The draft, penned by the United Kingdom, also urged the parties to continue to "engage constructively, in good faith and without preconditions" with Martin Griffiths, the UN Special Envoy for Yemen, including by working to stabilize the war-battered economy and reopening Sana'a airport, as well as committing to another round of peace talks, in January 2019. Further in the resolution, the 15-member Council authorized the Secretary-General to establish and deploy, "for an initial period of 30 days", an advance monitoring team on the ground, to support and facilitate the immediate...

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