Disagreements were over a proposed prisoner exchange and the opening
of a humanitarian corridor to the war-torn city of Taiz, the sources
said.
Yemeni negotiators at
U.N.-sponsored peace talks agreed on Saturday to form a committee to
oversee a fragile ceasefire but the day ended without further progress
being amid strong mutual distrust, sources close to the talks told
Reuters.
Fresh fighting in Yemen also
threatened the peace talks, which end on Sunday, their sixth day. The
eight-month conflict in impoverished Yemen has killed thousands of
people and caused a major humanitarian crisis.
The
ceasefire committee will be headed by a Lebanese army general and
consist of representatives from the Saudi-backed government of Yemen's
President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi and from the rival Houthi movement, which is allied to Iran.
But after the apparent breakthrough on the committee, Saturday's round of talks did not yield more results.
Face-to-face
talks between Hadi's government and the Houthi group have not occurred
since Wednesday evening after the Houthis rejected demands for the
release of detained senior officials, including Yemen's defence minister
and Hadi's brother, said sources close to the talks.
The U.N. special envoy, Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed, is shuttling between the two sides to try and bridge differences.
Disagreements
were over a proposed prisoner exchange and the opening of a
humanitarian corridor to the war-torn city of Taiz, the sources said.
In
addition, a rare one-week truce meant to facilitate the negotiations
was compromised on Saturday afternoon as clashes broke out between
Houthi fighters and Saudi troops along the Yemeni-Saudi border.
Both sides accuse each other of violating the ceasefire.
Saudi's
Civil Defence Force said on Twitter that a rocket fired from Yemen
killed two Saudi workers and injured a civilian in the Saudi border city
of Najran.
The United Nations Special Envoy for
Yemen voiced deep concern at "numerous reports of violations of the
cessation of hostilities", a U.N. statement said on Friday.
Yemen,
which was swept by mass Arab Spring-inspired protests in 2011, was this
year plunged into war after the Houthis overthrew the central
government, prompting Saudi Arabia and other Arab states in March to
launch a bombing campaign.
Troops loyal to Hadi
seized an important northwestern city and a military base from Houthis
on Friday who still control the capital Sanaa, residents and tribal
sources said.
Planes and gunboats from a Saudi-led military coalition also bombarded targets in northern Yemen, residents said.
The
Houthis say they are ready to free the prisoners once a permanent
ceasefire is agreed, another source close to the talks told Reuters.
Hospital
sources said on Saturday that limited medical aid had reached a few
Houthi-controlled districts in the central city of Taiz, one of the
worst-affected cities.
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