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UN chief renews call for end to hostilities in Yemen

Yemeni children, who fled with their family from the city of Sirwah due to the fighting between Huthi rebels and militiamen loyal to Yemen's fugitive President Abderabbo Mansour Hadi, sit outside their shelter on April 24, 2015, on the outskirts of the Mareb province. AFP PHOTO / TAHA SALEH / AFP PHOTO / TAHA SALEH
Yemeni children, who fled with their family from the city of Sirwah due to the fighting between Huthi rebels and militiamen loyal to Yemen's fugitive President Abderabbo Mansour Hadi, sit outside their shelter on April 24, 2015, on the outskirts of the Mareb province. AFP PHOTO / TAHA SALEH / AFP PHOTO / TAHA SALEH
Written by NY Staff

Ban Ki-moon’s call comes in light of devastating series of raids resulting in numerous civilian deaths and injuries.

UN Chief Ban Ki-moon repeated his call on Wednesday for all sides in the conflict in Yemen to “immediately cease all hostilities”, after a devastating series of raids resulting in numerous civilian deaths and injuries.

In a statement, Ban urged “all parties to the conflict to immediately cease all hostilities and for the Yemeni parties to return to direct talks facilitated by his special envoy for Yemen”.

He reminded all parties “of the utmost necessity to protect civilians and to respect their obligations under international humanitarian law”.

Ban condemned a reported air strike that hit east of Sanaa in Nehm, killing at least nine civilians.

He also denounced attacks that appeared to come from Yemen, which were said to have killed at least seven civilians when a workshop was hit on Tuesday in Najran, Saudi Arabia.

That blow caused Saudi Arabia’s worst civilian death toll in the kingdom’s south since the Arab coalition intervened in Yemen in March 2015.

“Civilians, including children, are paying the heaviest price in the ongoing conflict, as civilian infrastructure, such as schools and hospitals, continue to be hit,” he said.

Ban expressed alarm at “the escalation of air strikes and ground fighting in Yemen and along the Saudi Arabia-Yemen border” since the suspension in early August of UN-brokered peace talks in Kuwait.

The UN says more than 6,500 people, mostly civilians, have been killed since last March and more than 80 percent of the population needs humanitarian aid.

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