Yemen Peace Talks Resume in Kuwait

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Delayed peace talks aimed at ending 13 months of conflict in Yemen resumed on Friday, a day after U.N. mediators finally managed to get warring sides to the table.

The United Nations hopes negotiations -- which were originally due to begin on Monday -- will put a stop to fighting across Yemen that has killed more than 6,800 people and driven 2.8 million from their homes since March last year.

The talks resumed on Friday afternoon, Charbel Raji, spokesman for U.N. envoy Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed told AFP.

Two delegations, each of seven members, representing the government, and the rebels and their allies, joined Ould Cheikh Ahmed at the meeting, a delegate said.

The envoy appealed to both government and rebel delegations to seize the opportunity of the talks in Kuwait, saying Yemen was "closer to peace than any time before".

The rebel delegation -- consisting of representatives of the Shiite Huthi militia and allied forces loyal to ousted president Ali Abdullah Saleh -- arrived in Kuwait late on Thursday after receiving assurances from the U.N. that a ceasefire -- in place since April 11 -- would be respected.

Delegates representing the government of President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi had threatened to pull out of talks altogether if the rebels were not around the table by Thursday evening.

A first session was eventually held and lasted less than two hours, a delegate told AFP.

Kuwaiti Foreign Minister Sheikh Sabah al-Khaled Al-Sabah hailed the talks as "a historic opportunity" to end the bloodshed.

"War will only lead to more devastation, losses and displacement of people," he said.

Yemen has been riven by fighting since a Saudi-led coalition launched a military intervention last year against Iran-backed Huthi rebels, who had seized the capital and much of the rest of the country.

The violence has allowed Al-Qaida and its jihadist rival the Islamic State group to make headway, overrunning swathes of southern Yemen and establishing a toehold around second city Aden -- where the Saudi-backed government is based.

The conflict has stoked tensions between Sunni heavyweight Saudi Arabia and its Shiite rival Iran, which has been accused of smuggling weapons to the rebels.

Previous U.N.-sponsored peace efforts failed to make any headway, and the last ceasefire in December was repeatedly violated and eventually abandoned by the Arab coalition on January 2.

But the U.N. envoy said the latest truce and negotiations offered a unique chance to end the violence.

"Today, you have one of two options -- a secure nation that guarantees an honorable life or the ruins of a nation," he told delegates.

The rebel delegation met Ould Cheikh Ahmed after the opening session, their news agency reported late Thursday, and stressed the "need to secure the ceasefire."

The delegation said the "key to reaching a solution is agreeing on a transitional authority," Sabanews.net reported.

Diplomats say the rebels are demanding an end to the coalition's air campaign and naval blockade, as well as its ground operations.

They also want U.N. sanctions against some of their leaders, including Saleh, to be lifted.

U.N. Security Council Resolution 2216, which is seen as a basis for any peace plan, states that the rebels must withdraw from seized territories and disarm before talks can progress.

But diplomatic sources have said the rebels are demanding a change to the U.N. initiative, preferring to first agree on a political leadership for Yemen before making military concessions on the ground.

At the opening session Thursday, Ould Cheikh Ahmed said the U.N. process "will not necessarily follow a particular sequence."

"Instead, discussions will happen in parallel through working committees that will look into implementation mechanisms of each element, for the sake of reaching one comprehensive agreement that paves the way for a peaceful and orderly transition."

The Huthis, who had waged an on-off rebellion for a decade, swept from their stronghold in the northern mountains to take Sanaa unopposed in September 2014, before storming south and forcing Hadi into exile in March last year.

With the support of coalition troops and air power, Hadi's loyalists have managed to oust the rebels from Aden and neighboring southern provinces as well as some districts on the Saudi border.

But the rebels and their allies remain in control of the capital and much of the northern and central highlands, as well as the Red Sea coast.

Despite the nominal ceasefire, fighting has continued, particularly around the battleground third city of Taez, where loyalist forces have been under rebel siege for months, and in Jawf province on the Saudi border, military sources said.

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