clear

Creating new perspectives since 2009

Saudi-led coalition lets 4 fuel ships dock at Yemen's Hudaydah

March 24, 2021 at 12:27 pm

UN aid relief arrives at the port of Hudaydah, Yemen on 4 February 2017 [Yemeni Activist‏/Twitter, File photo]

The Saudi-led coalition has allowed four fuel ships to dock at Yemen’s Red Sea port of Hudaydah, two sources familiar with the matter said, after the Houthi group said it would only agree to a ceasefire proposal if an air and sea blockade were lifted, Reuters reported.

Four vessels, including two carrying a total of 45,000 tonnes of gas oil, a ship loaded with 5,000 tonnes of liquefied petroleum gas, and a fourth tanker with 22,700 tonnes of fuel oil have received clearance from the coalition, the sources said.

As of this morning, the four vessels had not yet begun moving towards Hudaydah port, which is controlled by the Iran-aligned Houthi group battling the Saudi-led coalition in Yemen.

The Deputy Transport Minister of Yemen’s Saudi-backed government, Nasser Sharif, said on Twitter that a number of oil ships had been allowed to the port of Hudaydah to ease the humanitarian situation. He did not give further details.

Mohammed Abdulsalam, the Houthi chief negotiator, said: “The provision of fuel, food, medical and basic goods is a humanitarian and legal right for the Yemeni people. We do not accept any military or political conditions for receiving them.”

READ: Saudi Arabia proposes ceasefire in Yemen, Houthis sceptical

The blockade of Yemeni ports has been one of the main causes of the world’s worst humanitarian disaster.

Coalition warships off Hudaydah were holding up 14 fuel tankers as of yesterday even though they had secured UN clearance, United Nations data showed. Some have been waiting six months to dock.

Four other ships left without docking after waiting months.

On Monday, Saudi Arabia, which leads a coalition that has been fighting the Houthis since 2015, offered the group a ceasefire deal which would also include reopening Sanaa airport and allowing fuel and food imports through Hudaydah port.

The Houthis said the Saudi offer fell short of their demand for a complete lifting of the air and sea blockade, but that the group would continue to talk to the kingdom, the United States, and mediator Oman in pursuit of a peace deal.

On Tuesday the Houthis launched a drone attack on an airport in southern Saudi Arabia.