UN Envoy to Yemen: Houthis Must Immediately Cease Attacks on International Shipping

The Houthis claim their attacks on international shipping aims to pressure Israel to end its attack on Gaza. (AP)
The Houthis claim their attacks on international shipping aims to pressure Israel to end its attack on Gaza. (AP)
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UN Envoy to Yemen: Houthis Must Immediately Cease Attacks on International Shipping

The Houthis claim their attacks on international shipping aims to pressure Israel to end its attack on Gaza. (AP)
The Houthis claim their attacks on international shipping aims to pressure Israel to end its attack on Gaza. (AP)

UN Special Envoy for Yemen Hans Grundberg warned on Tuesday that escalation in the Middle East risks spiraling out of control, adding that the Iran-backed Houthis must immediately cease attacks on international shipping in the Red Sea and global waterway.

“The military escalation in the Middle East that we have witnessed for a year now, keeps intensifying and risks spiraling out of control,” Grundberg said in a briefing to the Security Council.

He noted that the safety of United Nations personnel has been increasingly at risk.

The envoy said it has been a particularly difficult year for UN personnel in the region and particularly in Yemen, where Houthis continue to hold UN personnel, civil society workers, and staff of diplomatic missions in arbitrary detention and continue their attacks on international shipping.

“These repeated attacks, including the recent strikes on tankers have significantly increased the risk of an environmental disaster,” he said, “Such attacks on civilian shipping are wholly unacceptable and must cease immediately.

Moreover, Grundberg stressed that the Yemenis continue to yearn and work for peace after more than nine years of conflict.

And yet, he said, “they see their space for meaningful engagement and peacebuilding under attack, with arbitrary detentions, death threats, and intimidation, especially in Houthi-controlled areas.”

The envoy called on the militia group to immediately and unconditionally release all those arbitrarily detained, including 17 UN personnel—four of whom are women and one of whom is from his own team—and to end their campaign of detentions.

Grundberg revealed that he has engaged in constructive discussions with Yemeni and international stakeholders during visits to New York, to Tehran and to Moscow where he underscored that a peaceful resolution of the conflict in Yemen is not only the most viable way forward but more importantly, it is definitely achievable.

Also, he stressed that the Yemeni people require sustained and unified international support, and “we must collectively keep the focus on making peace a reality.”

“We have the elements and the tools to prepare the ground,” he remarked, referring to the commitments made by the parties towards the establishment of a roadmap, including a nationwide ceasefire, addressing humanitarian and economic needs and preparing for an inclusive political process.

Despite the escalation, the envoy said these commitments “remain essential building blocks for peace in Yemen and the reference points for our discussions with Yemeni political party representatives and components, as well as civil society organizations, with the meaningful participation of women and youth.”

On the military front, the envoy spoke of relative calm on the frontlines, “despite occasional flare-ups that remind us of the fragility of the situation.”

He added that communication channels with senior military leadership through the Military Coordination Committee remain active, reinforcing the message that the groundwork laid now will be critical to ensuring the stability of a future ceasefire and other security arrangements.

On the economic level, Grundberg said: “We have identified options at the technical level and are working to convince the parties that collaboration on economic issues is the only way to achieve economic viability and stability.”

Also at the Security Council briefing, Joyce Msuya, Acting Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator expressed her “extreme” concern about the reported referral to “criminal prosecution” by the Houthi authorities of a significant number of arbitrarily detained colleagues, including three UN personnel – two from UNESCO and one from the UN Human Rights Office – who were detained in 2021 and 2023.

“The potential laying of charges against our colleagues is unacceptable,” she said.

The detentions are reflective of a growing, unacceptable pattern of attacks against humanitarians across the region, Msuya noted.

“Humanitarian relief personnel must be protected in accordance with international humanitarian law,” she urged.



West Bank Facing 'Most Dangerous Olive Season Ever': UN Experts

Olive harvests are central to Palestinian life and culture, said the independent experts - AFP
Olive harvests are central to Palestinian life and culture, said the independent experts - AFP
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West Bank Facing 'Most Dangerous Olive Season Ever': UN Experts

Olive harvests are central to Palestinian life and culture, said the independent experts - AFP
Olive harvests are central to Palestinian life and culture, said the independent experts - AFP

Palestinian farmers in the occupied West Bank are facing "the most dangerous olive season ever", UN experts said Wednesday, urging Israeli settlers and forces not to interfere with the harvest.

They also recommended a "foreign presence" to act as a buffer between the two sides.

A dozen United Nations experts said farmers were facing intimidation, restriction of access to lands, severe harassment and attacks by armed Israeli settlers and Israeli security forces.

"In 2023, the harvest was marred by a sharp increase in movement restrictions and violence by Israeli forces and settlers," the independent experts said in a statement, AFP reported.

Last year, they said, "Palestinians in the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, faced the highest level of Israeli settler violence."

Settlers had assaulted Palestinians, set fire to or damaged their crops, stolen sheep and blocked them from getting to their land, water and grazing areas, the statement added.

"Last year, Israel also seized more Palestinian land than in any year in the past 30 years," they said, adding that the situation was "expected to worsen".

- 'Challenges, threats, harassment' -

Olive harvests are central to Palestinian life and culture, said the independent experts, who are mandated by the Human Rights Council but do not speak for the United Nations.

"Restricting olive harvests, destroying orchards and banning access to water sources is an attempt by Israel to expand its illegal settlements," they argued.

Francesca Albanese, the UN special rapporteur on human rights in the Palestinian territories, was among the signatories.

The experts, also including those on the right to food, to safe drinking water and sanitation and to adequate housing, said Palestinian farmers were facing "enormous challenges, threats and harassment" in accessing their olive trees.

In 2023, more than 9,600 hectares (24,000 acres) of olive-cultivated land across the occupied West Bank was not harvested due to Israeli-imposed restrictions, they said.

That had meant the loss of 1,200 metric tons of olive oil, worth $10 million, they added. "This situation is expected to worsen," they warned, as the Israeli authorities had revoked or failed to issue permits allowing farmers to access their lands.

They urged Israeli forces to refrain from interfering with this year's olive harvest, and "concentrate their efforts on withdrawing the occupation and dismantling the colonies".

The experts said they would "continue to call for protection, including through a foreign presence acting as a buffer between the Palestinians and their aggressors, and to protect Palestinian farmers and their families".

Violence has soared in the West Bank since Hamas launched its unprecedented attack on Israel in October last year.

Israeli troops or settlers have killed more than 705 Palestinians in the West Bank since, the Ramallah-based health ministry said earlier this month.

Israeli officials say at least 24 Israelis, civilians or members of the security forces, have been killed in attacks carried out by Palestinian militants or in Israeli military operations over the same period in the West Bank.