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Saudi coalition transfers Yemeni prisoners as part of truce

SANAA, YEMEN (AP) – Three planes carrying 117 Yemeni prisoners landed on Friday in the southern port city of Aden, the Red Cross said.

The Saudi-led coalition fighting in Yemen announced last week that it would release 163 prisoners to its rivals – the Houthi rebels – in support of a cease-fire agreement between the warring sides. The agreement, brokered by the United Nations (UN), aims to pave the way to an end of Yemen’s eight-year civil war.

The Houthis however, denied that most were war detainees. In a statement the rebels’ prisoner affairs body said that only five of the group were prisoners of war. Among the returned were Yemeni fishermen and nine foreigners of African nationalities who had no affiliation with the Houthis, it added.

Member of the Houthi body known as the National Delegation, Abdel Malak al-Ajery, tweeted that the men who were returned were Yemeni labourers arrested while working in Saudi. He did not offer any evidence to back up his claim.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), which facilitated the repatriation, said in a statement that it had interviewed the detainees before they travelled to verify their identities and confirm that their wish was to return to Yemen.

Freed Yemeni prisoners arrive in the rebel-held capital Sanaa. PHOTO: AFP

It was unclear how the prisoners would make their way from Aden back home, to rebel-held north Yemen. Aden, in the country’s south, is controlled by Yemen’s internationally recognised government.

“We are pleased to see that humanitarian considerations are being prioritised for the sake of the families,” said Head of the ICRC delegation in Yemen Katharina Ritz in a statement.

Videos aired on the Saudi-owned Al-Arabiya news channel showed men dressed in white robes getting off a Red Cross airplane and holding flowers inside the Aden airport.

The truce, which went into effect on April 2, is the first nationwide cease-fire in Yemen in six years. It came amid concerted international and regional efforts to find a settlement to a conflict that has devastated the Arab world’s poorest country and pushed it to the brink of famine. But the full agreement has yet to be implemented. In late April, the warring sides failed to operate the first commercial flight in six years from the rebel-held capital of Sanaa as agreed under the truce. Houthi and coalition authorities have reported almost daily violations of the cease-fire, especially around the government-held central city of Marib, which the Houthis have attempted to seize for over a year.

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