No Script

Please Wait...

Al-Ahed Telegram

First Commercial Flight in 6 Years Leaves Yemen’s Capital Sanaa

First Commercial Flight in 6 Years Leaves Yemen’s Capital Sanaa
folder_openYemen access_timeone year ago
starAdd to favorites

By Staff, Agencies

The first commercial flight in nearly six years has taken off from Yemen’s capital, a major step forward in a peace process that has provided rare relief from conflict.

The Yemenia plane carrying 137 passengers, including patients needing treatment abroad and their relatives, took off from Sanaa on Monday for the Jordanian capital, Amman, just after 9am [06:00 GMT].

Before the takeoff, the plane taxied through an honor guard of two fire trucks spraying jets of water.

The flight was initially due to take off on April 24, but a dispute over passports issued by the Houthi rebels delayed it.

The SABA news agency said last week that new Yemeni passports would be issued in Jordan for those arriving with Houthi-issued travel documents.

Sanaa’s airport has been closed to commercial traffic since August 2016 because of a blockade by the Saudi-led military coalition.

According to United Nations figures, more than 150,000 people have died in the violence and millions have been displaced, creating what it calls the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.

But a truce has been in place since April 2, coinciding with the start of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

Five days after it took effect, Yemen’s Saudi-based ousted president handed his powers to a leadership council tasked with holding peace talks with the Ansarullah revolutionaries.

Resuming flights from Sanaa, reopening roads to the city of Taiz and allowing fuel tankers into the port of Hodeidah – a lifeline for Yemen – were all part of the agreement.

While fuel tankers have docked in Hodeidah and flights have now resumed from Sanaa, the main routes into Taiz remain cut off.

The inaugural flight under the truce had to be scrapped after Yemenia said it did not receive the necessary permits.

Each side blamed the other for the hold-up, while UN special envoy Hans Grundberg called for a quick resolution to the impasse.

The Norwegian Refugee Council [NRC] aid group said at the time that the inability to operate commercial flights out of Sanaa had stranded “tens of thousands of medical patients” seeking treatment abroad.

In a statement on Monday, NRC described the opening of the airport as a “stepping stone towards sustainable peace”.

“If the parties to the conflict continue to work together to operate regular flights in and out of Sanaa, they can help save thousands of lives, prevent premature deaths, and support the country’s economy,” said Erin Hutchinson, the aid group’s country director in Yemen.

“Yemenis will enjoy greater freedom of movement, and it will be quicker, easier, and cheaper to bring goods and aid into the country,” she added.

Comments