UNITED NATIONS: Security Council members said envoy Martin Griffiths reported no progress Wednesday in getting the warring parties in Yemen to withdraw their forces from the key port of Hodeidah and two smaller ports as called for in an agreement they signed in December.
Franceâs Foreign Minister Francois Delattre, the current council president, told reporters after Wednesdayâs closed-door meeting that his report was ânot good.â Belgiumâs UN Ambassador Marc Pecsteen de Buytswerve was blunter, telling reporters: âAt this point of time there is no progress so the council might do something.â
Griffiths had been more optimistic last month, telling the council he expected the imminent pullout of forces, which would provide an opportunity to move to the major goal of ending the four-year conflict in Yemen that has created the worldâs worst humanitarian crisis.
But Britainâs UN Ambassador Karen Pierce said council members have always said the agreement between Yemenâs government and Houthi militants reached in Stockholm âis fragile â and this is proof that it is fragile.â
âI wouldnât say it was in more trouble than we expected,â she said. âItâs the age old problem of building trust and confidence between the parties.â
âItâs clear that one party has more problems than the other at the moment, but this tends to swing around,â Pierce said, without naming the party.
Griffiths did not speak to reporters.
UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric said Griffiths âinformed council members they were still working with the parties to make the redeployment in Hodeida a reality.â
Responding to a question on whether the Hodeidah agreement was unraveling, Dujarric said, âI would not use the term unraveling. I think patience and determination are really the name of the game.â
âNo one expected this to be easy,â Dujarric said. âThis is the first agreement reached by the parties since the start of the conflictâ and Griffiths and the UN redeployment monitoring team âare determined to help the parties to reach an agreement to implement what was actually agreed to.â
Germanyâs UN Ambassador Christoph Heusgen said that at Wednesdayâs council meeting âthere was frustration that we havenât made more progress.â
âBut what was clear is that there is no alternative but to continue on that process and to use all the different channels that are at our disposal to get the parties to implement the Stockholm agreement,â he said.
On Tuesday, the five permanent members of the UN Security Council â China, France, Russia, Britain and the USâ called on both sides to implement a peace deal on the port city.
Under the plan agreed on during talks in December, coalition-backed forces and Houthi militiamen would pull out of Hodeidah, while allowing a local force to take control. But on Sunday, fighting erupted in Hodeidah, the first significant clashes since warring sides agreed to a cease-fire.
The conflict in Yemen began with the 2014 takeover of the capital, Sanaa, by the Iranian-backed Houthis.
An Arab coalition including șŁœÇֱȄ has been fighting the Houthis since 2015.
The fighting in the Arab worldâs poorest country has killed thousands of civilians, left millions suffering from food and medical care shortages, and pushed the country to the brink of famine.
Security Council members report no progress on Yemen deal
Updated 13 March 2019
Security Council members report no progress on Yemen deal

- Franceâs Foreign Minister Francois Delattre, the current council president, said the report was ânot good
- The first significant fighting since the ceasefire erupted in Hodeidah on Sunday