More than 100 prisoners of war were flown from Saudi Arabia to Yemen on Monday, further buoying peace hopes a day after a major exchange of 869 captives ended, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said.
Two ICRC planes carrying 48 prisoners each flew to Sanaa, Yemen's rebel-held capital, while a third with eight captives headed for government-controlled Aden in the south, the humanitarian group said.
A member of Yemeni government forces who has been released, disembarks from an aircraft upon arrival at Marib airport. AFP
The "unilateral" release is outside the terms of the three-day exchange that was negotiated between Yemen's Houthi rebels and government officials and finished on Sunday, ICRC media adviser Jessica Moussan told AFP.
"We welcome this initiative and are pleased to see that humanitarian considerations are being taken for the sake of reuniting families," Moussan said. "This will bring immense relief to the families of the detainees," she added.
A freed detainee embraces a relative at Sanaa Airport after arriving from Saudi Arabia. Reuters
The ICRC is "facilitating" the transfer by providing air transport and logistical support, and by interviewing the captives, Moussan said.
The release of 104 captives, days before the major Muslim festival of Eid Al Fitr, takes the total number to 973 freed since Friday.
The Saudi-led coalition's spokesman, Turki Al Maliki, confirmed the extra releases, saying they "completed" the prisoner exchange. This "extension of previous humanitarian initiatives" aims to help "stabilise" the lapsed truce and create an "atmosphere of dialogue", Maliki said, according to the official Saudi Press Agency.
Freed detainees sit at Sanaa Airport after arriving on an ICRC plane from Saudi Arabia. Reuters
The prisoner releases come a month after Saudi Arabia and Iran agreed to re-establish diplomatic ties, sparking a wave of rapprochement across the troubled region.
Last week, a Saudi delegation held talks in Sanaa aimed at establishing a more durable ceasefire. The discussions ended without a truce but with an agreement to meet again.
Agence France-Presse