The party of Yemen’s former president, a main player in the messy, months-old civil war, said in an e-mailed statement that it accepts a peace plan brokered by the UN in talks in Oman.
The General People’s Congress is the party of former Yemeni president Ali Abdullah Saleh, to whom many of the army units fighting alongside the northern Houthi militia against forces backed by Gulf states remain loyal.
“An official source at the General People’s Congress reiterated the party’s fast position on ending hostilities and raising the blockade, and on a peaceful solution to Yemen’s crisis,” the party said in the statement.
Yemeni President Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi, supported by a Saudi-led military coalition and allied to local militias, has ruled out an agreement until the Houthis and Saleh’s forces implement a UN resolution by quitting cities and surrendering arms.
However, he has also said his government would join the UN-sponsored talks if the Houthis publicly accepted the resolution.
The General People’s Congress said in its statement that any implementation of UN Security Council resolution 2216 must take place “in accordance with operational mechanisms agreed upon by all parties,” implying that a wider agreement should come first.
The Gulf-backed forces in recent weeks have pushed the Houthis and Saleh’s forces out of Yemen’s second city, Aden, retaken swaths of the south and mounted an offensive in the Marib area east of the capital, Sana’a.
The Gulf countries and Hadi have repeatedly said that they do not trust Saleh or the Houthis to implement peace agreements, because they believe them to have reneged on previous political deals since the start of a 2012 transition from Saleh’s rule.
International aid agencies and the UN have raised alarm over the humanitarian cost of Yemen’s civil war, both from fighting that has killed more than 5,000 people, and from a coalition blockade they said has brought the nation close to famine.
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