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This page is the English version of Almasirah Media Network website and it focuses on delivering all leading News and developments in Yemen, the Middle East and the world. In the eara of misinformation imposed by the main stream media in the Middle East and abroad, Almasirah Media Network strives towards promoting knowledge, principle values and justice, among all societies and cultures in the world

YPC: Number of Fuel Tankers Received During Truce, 39% of Agreed 

News - Yemen: The Yemeni Petroleum Company (YPC) revealed the number of fuel ships allowed by the aggression to reach the port of Hodeidah, the period of detention and the fines incurred during the announced truce and its two-month extension for the period April 2 to July 14.

 

In a statement, the company stated that, after extending the announced truce for two months, it was agreed to enter 18 fuel ships during the period (June 2 - August 2), but the coalition of aggression allowed only seven out of 18 ships to enter the port of Hodeidah.

YPC confirmed that the number of ships currently detained by the coalition of aggression are "Sundus" and "Anne Victus" gasoline tankers, and the gas tanker"Lady Sarah".

The company stated that the number of fuel ships that were allowed to enter the port of Hodeidah since the beginning of the truce until July 14, 22 out of 36 ships, while the total period of detention amounted to 197 days.

It pointed out that the number of ships that entered, compared to what was agreed upon, was 39%, indicating that the total delay fines incurred by the ships that entered during the truce period amounted to $3.94 million, and this indicates that the commitment to the truce is still below the required level.

The company pointed out that between what the countries of the coalition of aggression committed to after extending the truce and what they implemented, the suffering of the Yemeni people remains.
In early April, after Yemen’s Supreme Political Council declared a voluntary and unilateral three-day pause in retaliatory strikes against targets in Saudi Arabia, the UN special envoy for Yemen, Hans Grundberg, announced the nationwide ceasefire, for the first time since 2016.

The deal stipulates halting offensive military operations, including cross-border attacks, and allowing fuel-laden ships to enter Yemen's lifeline al-Hudaydah port and commercial flights in and out of the airport in the capital Sana'a "to predetermined destinations in the region ."

However, in light of UN silence, the Saudi-led aggression was still obstructing flights to the Sana'a International Airport in Yemen’s capital and detaining fuel ships that were headed to the country. The fires of the aggression side did not subside along the fronts, on the borders and inside, including shelling, reconnaissance, development and crawl.
 
In early June, the United Nations announced that Yemen’s National Salvation Government and the US-Saudi coalition have agreed to renew the two-month truce after days of negotiations and promises to fulfill the terms of the agreement.
 
The UN envoy noted that the truce was extended under the same terms as the previous one.

The United Nations continues to condone the crimes committed by the Saudi-led aggression. It only holds the coalition responsible for crimes when it seeks to blackmail the Kingdom and oblige it to pay millions of dollars. The UN is not concerned with the souls of the victims, as it provided cover for this aggression for years, and kept silent in the face of many of its criminal practices, whether through raids or sieges.

Since June 2020, the aggression and its allied government have continued to prevent fuel ships from entering the port of Hodeidah, except for a few ships that entered the port with a large time difference between each ship. Most of the ships left the place where they were being held by the forces of aggression, with their full cargo, after accumulating delay fines, exceeding the price of the cargo.
 
A suffocating fuel crisis in all governorates is experienced under the authority of Sana’a. Most of the important vital sectors, especially the health sector, are threatened with suspension, while work has been disrupted in many productive and service sectors, which caused economic losses of millions of dollars.
 
 
 

#Yemen #Aggression #YPC #Violations About 1 year
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This page is the English version of Almasirah Media Network website and it focuses on delivering all leading News and developments in Yemen, the Middle East and the world. In the eara of misinformation imposed by the main stream media in the Middle East and abroad, Almasirah Media Network strives towards promoting knowledge, principle values and justice, among all societies and cultures in the world

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