Libya re-opens main border post with Tunisia

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Libya re-opens main border post with Tunisia

ADEN: Yemen’s warring parties will not meet directly at UN-brokered peace talks in Geneva this week, likely to focus on a prisoner exchange deal and the fate of a key port, government officials said Sunday.

The UN has invited Yemen’s government and the Iran-backed Houthi militia to Geneva for talks which open Thursday.

Both parties have confirmed they are sending high-level delegations to the talks, but officials say expectations of a breakthrough are low.

UN envoy Martin Griffiths has said the talks are aimed at charting a path forward to revive UN-backed negotiations which broke down in 2016. The Yemeni government says the meetings will likely focus on a prisoner exchange deal and the fate of embattled Hodeida, the Houthi-held port city.

Yemen’s Foreign Minister Khaled Al-Yamani told AFP the meetings “will not be face-to-face and depend on how well the UN envoy manages the two sides.”

“The consultations will be indirect, unless there is some progress that can be made directly,” said Abdullah Al-Olaimi, head of Yemen’s presidential office and a member of the Geneva delegation.

Yemen’s government has openly said it has low expectations for the talks, blaming the Houthis for refusing to make concessions.

“Our expectations are limited to the possibility of progress in the question of prisoners and detainees,” Yamani said.

“I think this is the chance to succeed in securing the release of prisoners, and I believe the other party is also willing and ready.”

The US said on Sunday it “fully supported” Griffiths’ efforts.

“It is imperative that all parties work toward a comprehensive political solution to avoid further harm to the Yemeni people,” said state department spokesperson Heather Nauert.

The UN has set a low bar for the talks — the first since 106 days of negotiations in Kuwait failed to yield an agreement between the government and Houthi militia in 2016.

“The aim of this first round of consultations is to better understand how committed both parties are to the framework for formal negotiations … and to come to some conclusions about how those negotiations may start,” said UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric.

In July, the Yemeni government demanded the release of all prisoners held by the Houthis as a condition for the start of peace talks.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, a government source said the delegation would demand the release of 5,000 prisoners while the Houthis were hoping for the liberation of 3,000 of their fighters.

Rights group Amnesty International in July said it feared violations in a string of Yemeni prisons could amount to war crimes.

The Geneva talks will also look at the economy in Yemen, long the Arab world’s most impoverished country.

In 2014, the Iran-backed Houthis overran the capital, driving out the government of President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi and setting up a parallel government in Sanaa.

The rebels, however, have been unable to pay the salaries of many civil servants for months, according to reports from the capital.

Yamani said the government could step in to help pay the overdue salaries, a move likely aimed at strengthening the state’s grip on the national economy and boosting its standing in militia-held areas.