The Red Cross wants to turn the Yemeni ceasefire into a permanent ceasefire

According to IRNA, Hans Grundberg, the UN special envoy for Yemen, announced on Thursday that the ceasefire in Yemen had been extended for two months, announcing that the humanitarian and military ceasefire in Yemen had been extended for another two months.
Following the announcement of the agreement reached by the Yemeni parties to extend the ceasefire since last April, Fabrizio Carboni, the director of the Red Cross in the Middle East and the Middle East, tweeted: The temporary ceasefire became a permanent ceasefire in Yemen.
“Let’s give the good news to the Yemeni people to turn this ceasefire into a permanent ceasefire,” he wrote.
“Our time is running out and the Yemeni people are facing enormous challenges related to the climate crisis and the dire consequences of years of conflict,” added the director of the Red Cross in the Middle East and the Middle East.
In this regard, “David Grisley”, the UN Humanitarian Coordinator in Yemen, tweeted that the extension of the ceasefire with the mediation of the UN is very good news.
“I fully support the efforts of UN Special Envoy Hans Grundberg to implement and unify all elements of the ceasefire, including the reopening of roads and highways,” Grisley added.
Grundberg announced on Thursday that the parties to the conflict in Yemen have agreed to extend the ceasefire for another two months.
At the suggestion of the United Nations, a two-month ceasefire was established in Yemen on April 2nd (April 13th), the most important of which was the entry of 18 fuel-carrying ships into the ports of Al-Hudaidah and the permission of two weekly round-trip flights from Sanaa Airport.
Following the end of the ceasefire, which has been repeatedly violated by the Saudi aggression coalition, UN consultations began to renew it, and finally yesterday, Thursday, the UN special envoy for Yemen announced that an agreement had been reached to extend it for two months.
The Yemeni Supreme Political Council stressed Wednesday night that the extension of the ceasefire is conditional on the fulfillment of all obligations under the previous ceasefire and compensation for violations.
Saudi Arabia launched a large-scale offensive against Yemen, the poorest Arab country, on April 26, 1994, in the form of a coalition of several Arab countries, including the UAE, with the help and green light of the United States, under the pretext of returning ousted President Abd al-Mansour Hadi. He fulfilled his political goals and ambitions, but he failed to achieve these goals and was forced to accept a ceasefire due to the heroic resistance of the Yemeni people and the armed forces and their special missile and drone operations.