Lenderking Meets Al-Alimi as he Kicks off Tour to Back Extension of Yemen Truce

Lenderking and al-Alimi meet in September. (US State Dept - Near Eastern Affairs)
Lenderking and al-Alimi meet in September. (US State Dept - Near Eastern Affairs)
TT

Lenderking Meets Al-Alimi as he Kicks off Tour to Back Extension of Yemen Truce

Lenderking and al-Alimi meet in September. (US State Dept - Near Eastern Affairs)
Lenderking and al-Alimi meet in September. (US State Dept - Near Eastern Affairs)

United States envoy to Yemen, Tim Lenderking kicked off his new tour of the region in Riyadh where he held talks with Chairman of the Yemeni Presidential Leadership Council Dr. Rashad Al-Alimi.

Lenderking is in the region to garner support for the extension of the nationwide truce in the war-torn country that expired on October 2.

The Iran-backed Houthi militias had refused proposals by United Nations envoy to Yemen, Hans Grundberg, to extend and expand the ceasefire. During a briefing at the UN Security Council on Thursday, Grundberg said the Houthis had made “additional demands that could not be met.”

Lenderking and al-Alimi discussed the situation in Yemen and reviewed efforts to renew the truce, reported the Saba news agency.

They tackled the “required guarantees and pressure” to make the Houthis respect their commitments in line with the truce, which was first adopted in April and extended on two occasions for a two-month period each.

They also addressed the Stockholm Agreement on the Hodeidah province, the reopening of routes to the Houthi-besieged city of Taiz and paying the salaries of public sector employees from Hodeidah port revenues.

Al-Alimi stressed that the Presidential Leadership Council and government were committed to reaching comprehensive and sustainable peace in Yemen based on the agreed references. They were also committed to supporting Grundberg and Lenderking’s efforts to ease the suffering of the Yemeni people.

Lenderking is in the region to “support intensive, UN-led negotiations with the Yemeni parties to reach agreement on a truce extension and expansion, for the sake of Yemenis,” the US State Department had said on Tuesday.

“The Houthis have an opportunity to support an expanded truce agreement that would provide millions of Yemenis with immediate relief, including much-needed civil servant salary payments, opening roads to and through Taiz and across the country, more flight destinations from Sanaa, and a path to a durable, inclusive Yemen-led peace process, that includes Yemenis’ calls for justice, accountability, and redress for human rights violations and abuses,” it added.

“The truce remains the best opportunity for peace Yemenis have had in years. The United States and the international community stand ready to support an expanded truce,” it stressed.

The government had said that it was flexible in dealing with the truce proposals suggested by Grundberg.

The Houthis “responded to this flexibility with unjustified intransigence that only prioritizes the expansionist Iranian agenda in the region at the expense of the Yemeni people’s interests, security and stability,” he added.

Houthi leader, Abdulmalek al-Houthi has urged his followers to recruit new fighters, reiterating the militias’ demands to end the crisis, starting with lifting restrictions on the delivery of Iranian weapons to ports held by the militias. The Houthis have also been demanding that the Saudi-led Arab coalition cease its support to the legitimate government.

The international community fears that the end of the true and Houthi intransigence may lead to renewed clashes on a wide scale in Yemen. The country had witnessed a remarkable drop in fighting throughout the six months when the truce was in place.



Israeli Airstrike South of Beirut Kills at Least 15, Lebanon’s Health Ministry Says

 A building damaged in an Israeli military strike in the town of Jiyeh, south of Beirut, Lebanon, 05 November 2024. (EPA)
A building damaged in an Israeli military strike in the town of Jiyeh, south of Beirut, Lebanon, 05 November 2024. (EPA)
TT

Israeli Airstrike South of Beirut Kills at Least 15, Lebanon’s Health Ministry Says

 A building damaged in an Israeli military strike in the town of Jiyeh, south of Beirut, Lebanon, 05 November 2024. (EPA)
A building damaged in an Israeli military strike in the town of Jiyeh, south of Beirut, Lebanon, 05 November 2024. (EPA)

An Israeli airstrike that hit an apartment building in a village south of Beirut killed at least 15 people, Lebanon’s Health Ministry said Tuesday.

The ministry said the toll is not final and operations to rescue people from under the rubble are ongoing.

Lebanon’s state news agency said the airstrike hit an area known as Barja just north of the port city of Sidon. It was not immediately clear what the target of the airstrike was.

Earlier on Tuesday, an Israeli airstrike killed one person and wounded 20 others in the nearby town of Jiyeh.

Both attacks hit areas that have not been a regular target of Israeli military operations and had not received prior evacuation warnings.  

"It felt like it was inside the house," Malika Al Hajj, an elderly woman living in Jiyeh, told The Associated Press. "I ran away — I don’t even know which neighbor brought me out, because everything was black. You couldn’t see anything."  

Once outside, Hajj said she discovered that the strike had hit the nearby building where her nephews live.  

"Men, women and children" live inside, she said. "I just want to be reassured. I saw some of them, but the others, they told me, were taken to the hospital."  

At the site of the strike, the building’s skeletal frame stands amid the rubble, its concrete shattered, windows blown out and metal twisted from the impact.  

Families were seen leaving the area, carrying what belongings they could gather.

Israeli attacks in Lebanon have killed at least 3,013 people and injured 13,553 others since Oct. 2023, the Lebanese government said on Tuesday.