US Envoy Heads to the Region to Support Yemen Truce

US special envoy for Yemen Tim Lenderking (Reuters)
US special envoy for Yemen Tim Lenderking (Reuters)
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US Envoy Heads to the Region to Support Yemen Truce

US special envoy for Yemen Tim Lenderking (Reuters)
US special envoy for Yemen Tim Lenderking (Reuters)

US State Department announced Monday that Special Envoy for Yemen Tim Lenderking would travel to the Middle East to continue US diplomatic efforts supporting the UN-mediated truce in Yemen.

The State Department website stated that Lenderking was headed to Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, and that his regional tour would include Oman and Jordan.

"Special Envoy Lenderking will continue our efforts to help advance peace," read the statement, adding that his engagements will "focus on expanding, extending, and renewing the current truce agreement that will further the tangible benefits already reaching Yemenis and build towards a more comprehensive, inclusive peace process and permanent ceasefire."

The statement concluded by calling on "all parties to choose peace and recovery over continued war and destruction for the sake of the Yemeni people."

The US envoy headed to the region again when the extension of the Yemeni truce received regional and international support, despite the Houthi violations and the group's leaders' threats to return to the fighting.

The United Nations concluded a two-month ceasefire, starting April 02, and it later managed to extend the agreement till August 02.

The UN envoy aspires to extend for a longer period of up to six months.

The Presidential Leadership Council in Yemen wants to extend the armistice. However, its president, Rashad al-Alimi, and his deputies insist on implementing the rest of the truce provisions, including ending Taiz's blockade and reopening the roads before negotiating any new issues.



UNRWA Lebanon Says Not Impacted by US Aid Freeze or New Israeli Law

 Head of UNRWA in Lebanon Dorothee Klaus speaks during a press conference in her offices in Beirut, Lebanon January 29, 2025. (Reuters)
Head of UNRWA in Lebanon Dorothee Klaus speaks during a press conference in her offices in Beirut, Lebanon January 29, 2025. (Reuters)
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UNRWA Lebanon Says Not Impacted by US Aid Freeze or New Israeli Law

 Head of UNRWA in Lebanon Dorothee Klaus speaks during a press conference in her offices in Beirut, Lebanon January 29, 2025. (Reuters)
Head of UNRWA in Lebanon Dorothee Klaus speaks during a press conference in her offices in Beirut, Lebanon January 29, 2025. (Reuters)

The director of the United Nations agency for Palestinian refugees in Lebanon said on Wednesday that the agency had not been affected by US President Donald Trump's halt to US foreign aid funding or by an Israeli ban on its operations.

"UNRWA currently is not receiving any US funding so there is no direct impact of the more recent decisions related to the UN system for UNRWA," Dorothee Klaus told reporters at UNRWA's field office in Lebanon.

US funding to UNRWA was suspended last year until March 2025 under a deal reached by US lawmakers and after Israel accused 12 of the agency's 13,000 employees in Gaza of participating in the deadly Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attack that triggered the Gaza war.

The UN has said it had fired nine UNRWA staff who may have been involved and said it would investigate all accusations made.

Klaus said that UNRWA Lebanon had also placed four staff members on administrative leave as it investigated allegations they had breached the UN principle of neutrality.

One UNRWA teacher had already been suspended last year and a Hamas commander in Lebanon - killed in September in an Israeli strike - was found to have had an UNRWA job.

Klaus also said there was "no direct impact" on the agency's Lebanon operations from a new Israeli law banning UNRWA operations in East Jerusalem, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip and that "UNRWA will continue fully operating in Lebanon."

The law, adopted in October, bans UNRWA's operation on Israeli land - including East Jerusalem, which Israel annexed in a move not recognized internationally - and contact with Israeli authorities from Jan. 30.

UNRWA provides aid, health and education services to millions in the Palestinian territories and neighboring Arab countries of Syria, Lebanon and Jordan.

Its commissioner general Philippe Lazzarini said on Tuesday that UNRWA has been the target of a "fierce disinformation campaign" to "portray the agency as a terrorist organization."