A girl stands behind a fence at a school where she and her family have been accommodated from a village near Hodeida airport amid fighting between government forces and Houthi rebels. - Reuters
SANAA, Yemen - The war has since killed at least 10,000 people.
Published: Mon 18 Jun 2018, 10:30 PM
Updated: Tue 19 Jun 2018, 12:32 AM
UN ceasefire efforts in Yemen appeared to have fizzled on Monday as Saudi-backed pro-government forces press an offensive to retake the key rebel-held port city of Hodeida.
After two days of talks in the capital Sanaa, UN envoy Martin Griffiths was due to brief the Security Council later on Monday on his efforts to end the crisis over Hodeida, a key entry point for desperately-needed aid in a country on the brink of famine.
But the Iran-backed Houthi rebels said the talks had failed, and the head of their unofficial government rejected a ceasefire after meeting Griffiths on Sunday.
The Houthis, Zaidi Shia tribes linked to Iran, seized control of the area along with the capital Sanaa and much of northern Yemen in 2014, sparking an intervention by a Saudi-led alliance the following year.
The war has since killed at least 10,000 people and triggered what the UN says is the world's largest single humanitarian crisis. Some 22 million people need aid. More than 70 per cent of Yemen's imports flow through Hodeida.
Yemen's military, backed by Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, last week launched a major offensive aimed at retaking Hodeida, home to 600,000 civilians.
The Saudi alliance imposed a near-total blockade on Hodeida port earlier this year, saying that it served as a major conduit for illicit arms deliveries to the Houthi rebels by Iran.
Multiple rounds of UN-brokered talks have failed to reach a deal between the internationally-recognised government and the Houthi militia. The Houthis' Abdulaziz Saleh bin Habtoor was defiant on Sunday after meeting the UN envoy. "The peace sought by the people of Yemen will not come at the expense of our" rebels' blood, the militias' Saba news agency quoted him as saying.
The capture of Hodeida would be the Saudi-led coalition's biggest victory of the war so far.
Loyalist forces in recent days closed in on areas south and west of the port, advancing on a disused rebel-held airport just south of the docks, according to sources in the Yemeni army.
The Security Council on Thursday demanded that Hodeida port be kept open to vital food shipments, but stopped short of backing a Swedish call for a pause in the offensive to allow for talks on a rebel withdrawal.
Some groups, including the International Committee of the Red Cross and Norwegian Refugee Council, have said they were forced to suspend their work near Hodeida last week.
Civilian deaths have not yet been confirmed in Hodeida. The conflict has killed at least 139 fighters, mostly Houthi militants, according to medical and military sources.