The UN envoy to Yemen, Martin Griffiths, left Sanaa on Thursday after a one-day visit during which he met with Houthi leader Abdul Malik al-Houthi.
A source at Sanaa airport said a plane carrying Griffith took off from the airport today, heading for the envoy's office in Amman, Jordan.
In a tweet posted on his Twitter account on Wednesday, The Houthi group spokesman Mohammed Abdul Salam said that Griffiths met with Abdul Malik al-Houthi, and that they discussed the "stalemate suffered by the UN envoy in his repeated and unproductive tours, which are no longer new except recycling in narrow angles".
According to Abdeslam, the group renewed its "explicit and continuing demand to complete the Sweden Agreement, particularly on the Hodeidah Agreement. economic understandings and revenue consolidation, especially in light of the worsening humanitarian situation and multiple risks."
Abdul Salam noted that the group had warned Griffiths of the importance of "observing the required level of neutrality."
In addition, Anadolu news agency quoted a source close to the Houthis, that Griffiths had held meetings with the Leaders of the Houthis, who put some demands to him.
The agency source added, the Houthis "demanded the independence of their banking decision in light of developments in Aden, referring to the southern transitional council's control of state institutions in the interim capital.”
The UN envoy said during his briefing to the Security Council on Tuesday that he had submitted a proposal to the Yemeni government and the Houthi group earlier, and that he was waiting for a response from both sides by August 25, but did not hide his frustration over the delay in implementing the Stockholm agreement concluded on December 13th, No progress has been made so far.







