Sweden - Another round of talks on the Yemen conflict will likely take place in the coming months, sources said Sunday, as warring parties met for UN-sponsored talks in Sweden.
The Sweden initiative marks the first meeting between the two sides since the 2016 breakdown of talks to end the Yemen war, which has claimed more than 10,000 lives since 2015 when Saudi Arabia and its allies joined the government's fight against the Iran-backed rebels.
The conflict has triggered what the UN calls the world's worst humanitarian crisis, with nearly 14 million Yemenis at risk of mass starvation as violence, poverty, disease and blockades bring the impoverished country to its knees.
The talks are not aimed at finding a solution to the Yemen conflict, according to the UN.
Instead, they are focusing on a few key areas, the humanitarian corridors, a prisoner swap, the reopening of the defunct Sanaa international airport and the fate of Hodeida, the rebel-held Red Sea city that has proved an impasse in the talks.
Speaking on condition of anonymity, a UN source at the talks in the rural village of Rimbo said both the government and rival rebels had indicated they were willing to hold further talks in coming months.
International pressure
An international campaign has been mounting to deescalate hostilities in Yemen, where Saudi Arabia and Iran - archrivals both facing pressure by western states- back opposite sides.
"If we do not get the support of key states, then there will not be a solution," said the UN source.
Ambassadors of states with embassies in Yemen, including Saudi Arabia, Britain and France, are also present in Rimbo, although they have not attended any of the talks, according to UN sources.
While the government and rebels on Sunday ruled out a ceasefire, representatives of both parties said they were open to further negotiations.
"If we leave these consultations having made progress - progress in building confidence and finding a framework - we can hold a new round of talks" in the coming months, Huthi spokesman Mohammed Abdelsalam told reporters.
Hodeida 'most difficult'
Yemeni Foreign Minister Khaled Al Yamani on Saturday proposed that the government-controlled city of Aden could be used as the location for the country's main airport, with rebel-held Sanaa international turning into a domestic terminal - a proposal swiftly dismissed by the rebels.
But the Yemeni city of Hodeida, home to both a valuable port and frontlines, has proved the "most difficult" issue at the Sweden talks, according to the UN source.
The Huothi rebels seized the Red Sea city of Hodeida, a traditional conduit for 90 percent of food imports to impoverished Yemen, in a massive territorial takeover in 2014, sparking the intervention of Saudi Arabia and its allies the following year.
Shipments to Hodeida, including humanitarian aid, have been severely restricted by the coalition, which accuses Iran of smuggling arms to the rebels through the port and Sanaa airport.
Both parties have agreed to grant the UN a supervisory role in the port - but the government demands the rebels withdraw completely, and the Houthis, now ensconced in residential neighbourhoods to fight government forces, have repeatedly refused.
The Saudi-led alliance launched an offensive to retake densely-populated Hodeida in June, sparking fears of a fresh humanitarian crisis in a country already on the verge of famine.
The Saudi-led coalition fighting in Yemen said on Sunday it had issued 17 permits for vessels carrying foodstuffs and petroleum products destined for Yemeni ports.