NEW YORK, 11 June (Saba )- With the second round of the Yemen’s national
dialogue under way, the political transition in the country is largely
on course, a senior United Nations official told the Security Council on
Tuesday, urging continued cooperation and coordination among political
parties, the Government and the donor community.
“Yemen is in the heart of its transition,” Special Adviser Jamal Benomar
told the 15-member Council, presenting Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s
latest report. “In a country awash with arms and a history of conflict,
such an inclusive process of dialogue is a great achievement.”
The
second round of the UN-backed National Dialogue Conference includes 565
delegates representing a cross-section of Yemeni society.
Just
back from the capital, Sana’a, Mr. Benomar said “the ‘dialogue’ is
extending well beyond the Conference” with men and women engaged in
discussions and debates about the problems of their country and its
possible future in seminars, roundtables and open tents in town squares.
“As President Hadi has remarked, we are engaged in more than a
political transition; we are witnessing a transformation of the
political culture,” Mr. Benomar noted.
The ongoing conference
will feed into a constitution-making process and pave the way for
general elections in 2014. Preparations for the electoral process are
underway, including steps to create a new biometric voter registry, with
registration due to begin in September.
The UN has been
providing support in Yemen's transition in four key areas: political
facilitation; technical support; capacity-building; and a public
information and awareness campaign.
“We understand that there
are no guarantees of what lies ahead,” Mr. Benomar told the Council. “It
is an undertaking of great hope in a fragile environment, where a range
of perspectives and diverse interested are seeking to realize a new and
better order.”
He noted that to develop a new constitution, the
National Dialogue will need to find a consensual settlement to the
‘Southern question’ linked to southern separatists.
“In the
South, the streets are heating up,” Mr. Benomar said, adding that
“pent-up resentment at more than two decades of unaddressed grievances
and systematic marginalization.”
Since February, there was been a
“significant increase” in the frequency and number of demonstrators,
some resulting in injuries and deaths.
Two Commissions have been
established to address the unlawful or illegitimate seizure of property
and unjust dismissal from military and civil service, but without
additional resources for the Commissions and further confidence-building
measures by the Government or tangible improvements in people’s daily
lives, “the voices of discontent will amplify, narrowing the space for
dialogue,” he said.
The Special Advisor reiterated to the
Council that the only peaceful route to progress is through open
dialogue and, importantly, addressing the legacy of the past. He urged
Yemeni authorities to establish a Commission of Inquiry into the events
of 2011 and to adopt a law on transitional justice.
He also
noted the steps taken by President Hadi to restructure the country’s
armed forces, a move welcomed in April by Mr. Ban and the Security
Council, but stressed that “much more remains to be done to ensure the
professionalization” of the forces.
Highlighting other
challenges to the country, Mr. Benomar noted that despite all efforts to
counter it, Al Qaida remains a lethal threat in the Arabian Peninsula.
In
addition, the UN official made reference to “those who wish to
undermine the transition,” citing sabotage attacks on the country’s
energy exports and its electricity lines, costing the country hundreds
of millions of dollars.
“Those responsible for these crimes must be brought to account,” Mr. Benomar stressed.
He
also cited a partisan war through “misinformation, fabrication and
incitement” of the media for political means, and an increase in the
assassination of mid and high level security officials and the apparent
amassing of weapons among political factions.
“Arms smuggling into Yemen continues,” he said, noting that several shipments have recently been seized.
Also,
the humanitarian crisis in the country “continues unabated,” with more
than half of the population in need of humanitarian assistance to access
food, healthcare, safe water and sanitation, and more than one million
children suffering from acute malnutrition, Mr. Benomar said.
Saba