
Yemen plans to complain to the UN Security Council over what it says are Iran’s weapon transfers to Houthi allies fighting the internationally recognized Yemeni government, Foreign Minister Abdel-Malek Al-Mekhlafi said.
The minister also said he hoped a 72-hour humanitarian cease-fire would take effect “early next week.”
Yemen and Saudi Arabia blame Iran for supplying weapons to the Houthis. The UN mission in Iran did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the latest accusation.
“There are new weapons coming from Iran,” Al-Mekhlafi said in New York where he was attending the annual UN gathering of world leaders.
“It is impossible to hide that weapons-smuggling is still taking place from Iran. Some of these weapons have been found on the Saudi-Yemeni border and they are Iranian weapons,” he said.
Al-Mekhlafi said his government was in the process of filing a complaint to the UN Security Council, with evidence including documents and pictures.
The foreign minister said President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi had met with US and UN officials this week and had agreed in principle to a 72-hour cease-fire.
“He (Hadi) asked that the cease-fire be taken advantage of by lifting the unjust siege of Taiz and for food to enter simultaneously,” Al-Mekhlafi said, referring to a city in the country’s highlands.
The government was waiting for the UN envoy to speak with the Houthi side to secure those guarantees, he added.
Al-Mekhlafi defended the Yemeni president’s move to appoint a new Central Bank governor and move the bank’s headquarters to Aden, where Hadi’s government is based.
“This was a necessary step ... Even our allies, and the international institutions, have reached the conclusion that it was the necessary last step to save the Yemeni economy,” he said.
The government in Aden has accused the Houthis of squandering some $4 billion on the war effort from central bank reserves. The Houthis said the funds were used to finance imports of food and medicine.
Al-Mekhlafi said the government had made clear to the International Monetary Fund, World Bank, and American and British officials that the new central bank would pay public sector salaries for everyone, including those in areas under Houthi control.
He said the bank’s new administration was in the process of agreeing with a Russian company to print additional Yemeni notes.
Source: Arab News
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