Cautious optimism in Yemen that truce will hold, improve conditions
The two-month cease-fire in the seven-year civil war would greatly alleviate the suffering of the Yemeni people, if promises made by the warring parties are delivered, expert says.
Sultan Mejally is waiting in a line more than a kilometer long at a gas station in Yemen to fill up his car, which he uses to provide the main source of income to support his family of eight. Mejally says that the United Nations-brokered truce in the country’s civil war may have gone into effect earlier this month, but that the crisis of shortages of oil derivatives and the high prices of everyday commodities brought on by the conflict are still in full effect.
However, some optimists believe that this truce is the last chance to bring peace to Yemen, and that the initiatives that preceded it, including a prisoner exchange and wide-ranging discussions on issues related to a truce, are solid ground for completing peace negotiations.
In addition, prior to the truce announcement, the parties to Yemen’s civil war had agreed on a prisoner exchange.