Yemen’s exiled government backed out of UN-brokered peace talks on Sunday, as loyalist forces supported by a Saudi-led coalition launched a major offensive against Shiite Houthi rebels.
A military official said the offensive aims to push the Iran-backed insurgents out of the oil-rich Marib province east of Sana’a and eventually move on the capital, which the rebels seized a year earlier.
Yemeni President Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi’s government, which has fled to Saudi Arabia, said on Friday it would join UN-mediated talks this week in Oman.
Photo: Reuters
However, in a short statement overnight, Hadi’s office said the government would not attend talks unless the rebels first accept a UN resolution demanding their withdrawal from territory they have captured.
The government decided “not to take part in any meeting until the militia recognizes Resolution 2216 and agrees to implement it without conditions,” the statement said.
The UN’s special envoy for Yemen, Mauritanian diplomat Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed, had announced that the government and the rebels agreed to attend talks in Oman, the only Gulf Arab state not in the Saudi-led coalition.
The UN has called repeatedly for a ceasefire in Yemen, which has been wracked by conflict since March when the coalition began airstrikes against the rebels as they advanced on the city of Aden.
On Sunday, the Saudi-led coalition said five Saudi soldiers had died on the Yemen border, but did not specify when or how.
Hadi had fled to Aden after the militants seized control of Sana’a to press their demands for a greater share of power in the Sunni-majority country.
Gulf Arab states have accused Shiite regional rival Iran of backing the rebels in an attempt to destabilize the impoverished country on Saudi Arabia’s southern border.
Previous attempts at negotiations to end the conflict — which the UN estimates has killed more than 4,500 people — have repeatedly collapsed.
Pro-government forces have made significant gains in recent months as the coalition intensified its air strikes and sent modern equipment and reportedly thousands of troops to Yemen.
Analysts have said the war is entering a new and potentially decisive phase as Gulf nations build up ground forces to battle the rebels in the capital and their northern strongholds.
In July, loyalist troops freshly trained and equipped by the coalition pushed the rebels out of Aden and four other southern provinces.
On Sunday, Hadi loyalists launched the “largest and fiercest offensive since operations began in Marib province,” the military official said, adding that the rebels were targeted in the Jufeinah, Faw and Thatt-Alra areas.
The insurgents “repelled an advance backed by Apache helicopters and Saudi and Emirati armored vehicles” in Jufeinah, the rebel-run Saba news agency said, citing a military source.
Saudi Brigadier General Ahmed al-Assiri, spokesman for the coalition, said the operation in Marib “has just started,” adding in a statement to al-Jazeera news channel that it was “going as planned.”
Most of Marib is controlled by fighters and armed tribes allied to Hadi, but the rebels and renegade troops loyal to ousted president Ali Abdullah Saleh still hold parts of the province.
Saleh, who ruled for 33 years before being forced out in 2012 after a bloody year-long uprising, has thrown the support of his loyalists in the army behind the Houthis.
The offensive launched on Sunday aims to “regain control of the provinces of Marib and Jawf, as well as of Sanaa,” the official said after a military parade in Al-Aber in the eastern province of Hadramawt.
General Samir Shamfan, commander of the 23rd Mechanized Brigade based in Al-Aber, said about 12,000 soldiers have been assembled in the city about 270km east of Marib city.
The region’s Wadia border crossing point has seen coalition military reinforcements flow in over the past few weeks in preparation for an offensive to retake Sana’a.
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