Gas Ship Allowed Into Yemen’s Hodeidah Port As Part Of Truce

Gas Ship Allowed Into Yemen’s Hodeidah Port As Part Of Truce

SANAA, May 9 (NNN-YPA) – A ship carrying cooking gas was allowed to enter Yemen’s blockaded Red Sea port of Hodeidah yesterday, as part of the ongoing truce between the country’s warring sides, Houthi-run al-Masirah TV reported.

The Saudi-led coalition forces in Yemen agreed to grant the ship access to the port, after having withheld it for more than a week, according to al-Masirah TV.

Last week, the Houthi rebels accused the coalition of having been holding the ship since Apr 27, despite permission granted by the United Nations.

So far, several fuel ships have arrived at Hodeidah’s port, since a UN-brokered two-month truce entered into force on Apr 2, the Houthi-run television said.

The truce between the Houthis and the coalition-backed Yemeni government, includes allowing the entry of 18 fuel ships into the Houthi-held port of Hodeidah, two commercial flights a week to and from the Houthi-controlled Sanaa airport, and humanitarian aid access to the government-held Taiz city.

The truce has been largely held by the warring sides, but they have yet to reach a final agreement on resuming commercial flights at Sanaa airport.– NNN-YPA

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