UNITED NATIONS — The U.N. envoy for Yemen warned Tuesday that recent developments in the Red Sea, Israel and inside the country ''show the real danger of a devastating region-wide escalation'' — but he also pointed to a glimmer of hope.
Hans Grundberg said Yemen's warring parties — the internationally recognized government and Houthi rebels – informed him Monday night ''that they have agreed on a path to de-escalate a cycle of measures and countermeasures which had sought to tighten their grip on the banking and transport sectors.''
But he warned the U.N. Security Council that seven months of escalating actions reached ''a new and dangerous level last week'' which saw a Houthi drone attack on Tel Aviv and Israeli retaliatory attacks on Yemen's key port of Hodeida and its oil and power facilities.
He said Houthi attacks on ships in the Red Sea and surrounding waterways continue and the rebels are escalating their crackdown ''on civic space and on international organizations.'' Airstrikes on Houthi targets by the United States and United Kingdom are also continuing, he said.
Grundberg also warned that escalating economic issues have been ''translating into public threats to return to full-fledged war.''
Yemen has been engulfed in civil war since 2014, when the Iranian-backed Houthis seized much of northern Yemen and forced the internationally recognized government to flee from the capital, Sanaa. A Saudi-led coalition intervened the following year in support of government forces, and in time the conflict turned into a proxy war between Saudi Arabia and Iran.
While fighting has decreased considerably since a six-month truce in 2022, Grundberg told the council that clashes have been reported along numerous frontlines this month ''and we have witnessed an increase in military preparations and reinforcements.''
Rivalry between the Houthis and the southern government have fueled an economic divide, with the rivals establishing separate and independent central banks and different versions of the country's currency, the riyal.