US, UN Envoys Seeking to Revive Stalled Yemen Peace Efforts

Conflict-affected people get emergency food rations amid a food insecurity, in Amran province, Yemen, 08 December 2022 (issued 12 December 2022). (EPA)
Conflict-affected people get emergency food rations amid a food insecurity, in Amran province, Yemen, 08 December 2022 (issued 12 December 2022). (EPA)
TT

US, UN Envoys Seeking to Revive Stalled Yemen Peace Efforts

Conflict-affected people get emergency food rations amid a food insecurity, in Amran province, Yemen, 08 December 2022 (issued 12 December 2022). (EPA)
Conflict-affected people get emergency food rations amid a food insecurity, in Amran province, Yemen, 08 December 2022 (issued 12 December 2022). (EPA)

The US and United Nations envoys to Yemen kicked off on Thursday a visit to Riyadh to revive the stalled peace efforts in the war-torn country. 

US envoy Tim Lenderking and UN envoy Hans Grundberg held separate meetings with Chairman of the Presidential Leadership Council Dr. Rashad al-Alimi. 

Alimi focused during both meetings on the latest developments in Yemen and regional and international efforts to revive peace amid the Iran-backed Houthi militias’ intransigence and threats to international energy routes, said official Yemeni sources. 

Alimi underscored the presidential council and government’s efforts in pursuit of peace and positive approach towards the UN-sponsored nationwide truce that was implemented from April to October 2022. 

The Houthis refused to extend the truce, leading to its collapse. They followed up their rejection with terrorist attacks on ports and oil facilities that are lifelines to millions of Yemenis, continued Alimi. 

He stressed the importance of the international community taking measures to deter the Houthi terrorist threats and flagrant meddling of the Iranian regime in internal Yemeni affairs. 

He cited Tehran’s smuggling of banned weapons to Yemen in an effort to transform the country into a platform to threaten international security and peace. 

The presidential council reiterated its commitment to establishing comprehensive and lasting peace in Yemen based on the agreed references, he continued. He expressed support to US and UN peace efforts and all other efforts aimed at easing the humanitarian suffering of the Yemeni people and ending the Houthi coup. 

The Houthis meanwhile, have continued to reject UN efforts to renew and expand the truce. Instead, they have threatened to again renew fighting on the battlefield and have threatened to carry out attacks on oil export ports in liberated regions. 

Last month, Houthi leader Abdulmalek al-Houthi met with an Omani delegation that sought to persuade the militias to choose peace.  

On the ground, relative calm has prevailed at the battlefronts despite the collapse of the nationwide truce. 



Syrian Christians Celebrate Christmas in Damascus Amid Tight Security

An aerial picture shows a view of a crowd around a Christmas tree in Damascus on December 25, 2024. (Photo by Bakr ALKASEM / AFP)
An aerial picture shows a view of a crowd around a Christmas tree in Damascus on December 25, 2024. (Photo by Bakr ALKASEM / AFP)
TT

Syrian Christians Celebrate Christmas in Damascus Amid Tight Security

An aerial picture shows a view of a crowd around a Christmas tree in Damascus on December 25, 2024. (Photo by Bakr ALKASEM / AFP)
An aerial picture shows a view of a crowd around a Christmas tree in Damascus on December 25, 2024. (Photo by Bakr ALKASEM / AFP)

Syrian Christians gathered at churches in the country's capital Damascus on Wednesday amid tight security measures to celebrate their first Christmas after the fall of Bashar al-Assad.

"Today there is a large deployment of security to protect the churches, fearing sabotage, but things are normal," Nicola Yazgi told dpa, while attending a mass in eastern Damascus.

Security forces affiliated with Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), which is now leading Syria's interim government, were deployed outside churches and in the streets in Christian-majority neighborhoods in the capital, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

According to the UK-based war monitor, churches across Syria - including in the southern city of al-Sweida, and in the northern cities of Aleppo and Idlib - opened their doors for Christmas celebrations.

Yazgi said he was celebrating two things this year: "Christmas and the victory of the revolution and the fall of the tyrant. We hope that today will be the day of salvation from the era of al-Assad family injustices."

Suad al-Zein, an engineer, also joined the mass in Damascus. She expressed her joy despite the lack of decorations in the streets: "For us, joy is in our hearts."

Civil war broke out in Syria in 2011 following pro-democracy protests against al-Assad's regime.

In late November, HTS and other opposition groups launched a rapid offensive, making major territorial gains before capturing Damascus earlier this month. Al-Assad fled to Russia with his family.

Since then, HTS leader Ahmed al-Sharaa has tried to reassure minorities in Syria, promising moderation and respect for all religious sects.

A group of people burnt a Christmas tree in Hama province on Monday evening, prompting hundreds of protesters to take to the streets in several cities.