Jumat, 05 Februari 2021

Trump impeachment: The Republicans' dilemma - BBC News - BBC News

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  1. Trump impeachment: The Republicans' dilemma - BBC News  BBC News
  2. Donald Trump will refuse to testify at Senate impeachment trial, lawyers say  The Guardian
  3. Donald Trump furiously QUITS union over hearing on Capitol riots - 'Done nothing for me!'  Daily Express
  4. I’ve practiced law for decades. When I read Trump’s impeachment defense, I couldn’t stop laughing  The Independent
  5. Donald Trump's second impeachment: will the Senate convict him?  The Guardian
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2021-02-05 11:27:16Z
52781349573162

COVID-19: Minister defends hotel quarantine delay, saying 'we need time to prepare' - Sky News

A minister has blamed hotel quarantine not coming into force for another 10 days in England on needing more "time to prepare", after Labour branded the delay "beyond comprehension".

James Cleverly told Sky News that "hindsight is a wonderful thing", as he faced questions about why the policy was announced on 27 January but will not apply to travellers until 15 February.

A date for the opening of government-provided accommodation for people arriving in the country from 32 "red list" countries was announced overnight.

Live COVID updates from the UK and around the world

A plane passes over the Thistle Hotel at Heathrow. Prime Minister Boris Johnson is expected to approve plans to force some travellers arriving to the UK to quarantine in hotels to limit the spread of new coronavirus variants. Picture date: Tuesday January 26, 2021.
Image: The project will reportedly cost £55 million

Several cabinet ministers had struggled to put a firm date on the change, but when the detail finally emerged Labour said the measures will "go nowhere near far enough to be effective in preventing further variants".

At least 11 cases of the South African variant that scientists say vaccines are less but still effective against have been discovered across England with no links to travel, with further "mutations of concern" found in Bristol and Liverpool.

Mr Cleverly, a Foreign Office minister, said there is already an "existing suite of measures" at the border to try to stop the import of new variants - like the passenger locator form and mandatory isolation upon arrival for 10 days.

More from Covid-19

"This is about enhancing that quarantine requirement," he said, adding there is only "a very limited set of reasons people should be travelling at all".

Prime Minister Boris Johnson at PMQs
Image: Boris Johnson first announced plans for a hotel quarantine scheme on 27 January

He added the government is talking to other countries including Australia and New Zealand to learn from their experience but that "doesn't mean to say we will replicate what they do in every instance".

Mr Cleverly did not deny the government will foot the bill for all people's hotel quarantine stay.

And he dismissed the point raised by Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer at PMQs that the policy should apply to all travellers - not just nationals and residents arriving in England - because in the first wave 0.1% of cases came from China while 62% came from France and Spain.

"Comparing what we're doing now to what happened at the start is not that relevant," said Mr Cleverly.

"We know a huge deal more now about where in the world the virus is prevalent."

Ealing, west London, where the new coronavirus variant originating from South Africa has been located
Image: The South African variant appears to have begun spreading through community transmission

According to The Daily Telegraph, the project will cost the government £55m, which it will later try to recoup from travellers, as it plans to reserve 28,000 hotel rooms by 5pm this evening to accommodate 1,425 passengers a day.

The paper also said the scheme will run until at least 31 March and be reviewed every week after, with people quarantined for 11 nights and provided with three meals a day at a cost of up to £800 per person.

Labour's shadow home secretary Nick Thomas-Symonds said it was "beyond comprehension" that the policy would not come into effect until 15 February.

"We are in a race against time to protect our borders against new COVID strains. Yet hotel quarantine will come in to force more than 50 days after the South African strain was discovered," he said.

"Even when these measures eventually begin, they will not go nowhere near far enough to be effective in preventing further variants. As ever with this government, it is too little, too late."

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2021-02-05 09:11:15Z
CBMic2h0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L2NvdmlkLTE5LW1pbmlzdGVyLWRlZmVuZHMtaG90ZWwtcXVhcmFudGluZS1kZWxheS1zYXlpbmctd2UtbmVlZC10aW1lLXRvLXByZXBhcmUtMTIyMDkwNTLSAXdodHRwczovL25ld3Muc2t5LmNvbS9zdG9yeS9hbXAvY292aWQtMTktbWluaXN0ZXItZGVmZW5kcy1ob3RlbC1xdWFyYW50aW5lLWRlbGF5LXNheWluZy13ZS1uZWVkLXRpbWUtdG8tcHJlcGFyZS0xMjIwOTA1Mg

COVID-19: Minister defends hotel quarantine delay, saying 'we need time to prepare' - Sky News

A minister has blamed hotel quarantine not coming into force for another 10 days in England on needing more "time to prepare", after Labour branded the delay "beyond comprehension".

James Cleverly told Sky News that "hindsight is a wonderful thing", as he faced questions about why the policy was announced on 27 January but will not apply to travellers until 15 February.

A date for the opening of government-provided accommodation for people arriving in the country from 32 "red list" countries was announced overnight.

Live COVID updates from the UK and around the world

A plane passes over the Thistle Hotel at Heathrow. Prime Minister Boris Johnson is expected to approve plans to force some travellers arriving to the UK to quarantine in hotels to limit the spread of new coronavirus variants. Picture date: Tuesday January 26, 2021.
Image: The project will reportedly cost £55 million

Several cabinet ministers had struggled to put a firm date on the change, but when the detail finally emerged Labour said the measures will "go nowhere near far enough to be effective in preventing further variants".

At least 11 cases of the South African variant that scientists say vaccines are less but still effective against have been discovered across England with no links to travel, with further "mutations of concern" found in Bristol and Liverpool.

Mr Cleverly, a Foreign Office minister, said there is already an "existing suite of measures" at the border to try to stop the import of new variants - like the passenger locator form and mandatory isolation upon arrival for 10 days.

More from Covid-19

"This is about enhancing that quarantine requirement," he said, adding there is only "a very limited set of reasons people should be travelling at all".

Prime Minister Boris Johnson at PMQs
Image: Boris Johnson first announced plans for a hotel quarantine scheme on 27 January

He added the government is talking to other countries including Australia and New Zealand to learn from their experience but that "doesn't mean to say we will replicate what they do in every instance".

Mr Cleverly did not deny the government will foot the bill for all people's hotel quarantine stay.

And he dismissed the point raised by Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer at PMQs that the policy should apply to all travellers - not just nationals and residents arriving in England - because in the first wave 0.1% of cases came from China while 62% came from France and Spain.

"Comparing what we're doing now to what happened at the start is not that relevant," said Mr Cleverly.

"We know a huge deal more now about where in the world the virus is prevalent."

Ealing, west London, where the new coronavirus variant originating from South Africa has been located
Image: The South African variant appears to have begun spreading through community transmission

According to The Daily Telegraph, the project will cost the government £55m, which it will later try to recoup from travellers, as it plans to reserve 28,000 hotel rooms by 5pm this evening to accommodate 1,425 passengers a day.

The paper also said the scheme will run until at least 31 March and be reviewed every week after, with people quarantined for 11 nights and provided with three meals a day at a cost of up to £800 per person.

Labour's shadow home secretary Nick Thomas-Symonds said it was "beyond comprehension" that the policy would not come into effect until 15 February.

"We are in a race against time to protect our borders against new COVID strains. Yet hotel quarantine will come in to force more than 50 days after the South African strain was discovered," he said.

"Even when these measures eventually begin, they will not go nowhere near far enough to be effective in preventing further variants. As ever with this government, it is too little, too late."

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2021-02-05 08:12:06Z
CBMic2h0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L2NvdmlkLTE5LW1pbmlzdGVyLWRlZmVuZHMtaG90ZWwtcXVhcmFudGluZS1kZWxheS1zYXlpbmctd2UtbmVlZC10aW1lLXRvLXByZXBhcmUtMTIyMDkwNTLSAXdodHRwczovL25ld3Muc2t5LmNvbS9zdG9yeS9hbXAvY292aWQtMTktbWluaXN0ZXItZGVmZW5kcy1ob3RlbC1xdWFyYW50aW5lLWRlbGF5LXNheWluZy13ZS1uZWVkLXRpbWUtdG8tcHJlcGFyZS0xMjIwOTA1Mg

Donald Trump refuses to testify in Senate impeachment trial - The Times

Donald Trump rejected a call to testify under oath at his impeachment trial next week, dismissing the proceedings as unconstitutional.

The former president, 74, was challenged to undergo cross-examination by Jamie Raskin, the lead Democrat trial manager who will present the case against Trump on the charge of inciting insurrection.

Raskin said that there were factual discrepancies in Trump’s 12-page defence document which claimed the former president “performed admirably in his role as president, at all times doing what he thought was in the best interests of the American people”.

Trump will become the first person to go on trial twice in the Senate in only the fourth impeachment prosecution of a president in US history. He denies the single charge which requires a two-thirds

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2021-02-05 05:00:00Z
52781349573162

Kamis, 04 Februari 2021

Joe Biden tells Vladimir Putin US won't 'roll over' for Russia anymore - Sky News

President Biden has said he told Vladimir Putin the days of the US "rolling over" for Russia are over.

It comes as he seeks to move on from Donald Trump's foreign policy, seen as too close to Russia by many.

In a speech at the State Department, Mr Biden said: "America is back. Diplomacy is back."

The president said that during his call with Mr Putin last month he brought up subjects such as election interference, alleged Russian bounties offered to Taliban fighters to kill US troops, and the poisoning of Alexei Navalny.

"I made it clear to President Putin in a manner very different from my predecessor, that the days the United States rolling over in the face of Russia's aggressive actions, interfering with our elections, cyber attacks, poisoning citizens are over," Mr Biden said.

President Joe Biden has told Vladimir Putin the days of the US 'rolling over' for Russia have ended, File pic
Image: Mr Biden, pictured here with the Russian president in 2011, said he told his counterpart things were changing

He said his government would "not hesitate to raise the cost on Russia and defend our vital interests" and be "more effective in dealing with Russia when we work in coalition and coordination with other like-minded partners".

Mr Biden's talk touched on a range of other issues.

More from Joe Biden

He said the annual refugee cap for the US would be increased to 125,000 - after Donald Trump had reduced it to just 15,000.

On China, he said he would "take on directly the challenges posed (to) our prosperity, security and democratic values by our most serious competitor".

U.S. President Joe Biden delivers a foreign policy address as Vice President Kamala Harris listens during a visit to the State Department in Washington, U.S., February 4, 2021. REUTERS/Tom Brenner
Image: Joe Biden was making his first speech at the State Department as president

Mr Biden said his administration would confront China's "economic abuses" and "push back China's attack on human rights, intellectual property and global governance".

But the 46th president also said he was ready to work with Beijing when it was in America's interest.

Mr Biden also seems unlikely to follow through with Mr Trump's plan to withdraw around 9,500 of America's 34,500 troops in Germany.

While his predecessor was antagonistic towards NATO and criticised countries for not contributing enough, Mr Biden is seeking to rebuild the alliances.

President Biden also announced the end of support for Saudi Arabia's forces in the devastating civil war in Yemen.

Mr Biden said during his election campaign that he wanted to use diplomacy to end the conflict between the Saudi-backed government and Iran-aligned Houthi movement.

"The war has created a humanitarian and strategic catastrophe. "This war has to end," he told diplomats at the State Department on Thursday.

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Yemen: The analysis of a war crime

The United Nations has described Yemen as the world's worst humanitarian crisis, with 80% of people in need of aid, and demanded more answers in light of a Sky News report last month.

It puts the total estimated death toll at 233,000, including 131,000 from indirect causes such as a lack of food and health services.

America has helped the Saudis since 2015, which the White House had said was to try to prevent civilian casualties.

Donald Trump designated the Houthis in Yemen a terrorist organisation in one of his final acts, something the UN said could push the country further into disaster.

It said Yemen faced "a large-scale famine on a scale that we have not seen for nearly 40 years".

While the UK is not part of the Saudi-led coalition, the government has been accused by opposition MPs of "turning a blind eye" by continuing to sell weapons to Riyadh.

Mr Biden also used his first State Department visit as president to again urge Myanmar's military to relinquish power and release officials who have been detained, including Aung San Suu Kyi.

And ahead of the speech, national security adviser Jake Sullivan announced there would be a presidential memorandum to protect LGBT+ people worldwide.

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2021-02-04 23:03:45Z
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Biden demands Navalny freed and says he will not 'roll over' to Russia 'like my predecessor' - Daily Mail

Joe Biden demands Russia free Alexei Navalny 'immediately' as he sets out 'moral' foreign policy promising not to 'roll over' to Russia like 'my predecessor,' saying he will stand up to China

  • President Joe Biden said Russia needed to free Alexei Navalny 'immediately' during remarks Thursday from the State Department 
  • The new president also said he would not 'roll over' to President Vladimir Putin like 'my predecessor' 
  • Biden also pledged to 'take on directly' the challenges posed the U.S.'s 'most serious competitor,' China 
  • The president made the State Department's headquarters his first trip to a cabinet agency 
  • In his remarks, he knocked around President Donald Trump's foreign policy and said the U.S. needed to reclaim 'our credibility and moral authority'  

President Joe Biden said Russia needed to free Alexei Navalny 'immediately' as he said the United States will no longer 'roll over' to President Vladimir Putin like 'my predecessor.' 

The tough and anti-Trump talk came Thursday when Biden made his first trip to a cabinet agency, the State Department, under the leadership of his longtime aide, Secretary of State Tony Blinken, and called for 'reclaiming our credibility and moral authority.' 

'Much of which has been lost,' Biden uttered. 

There, Biden also said he would 'take on directly' the challenges posed the the U.S.'s 'most serious competitor,' China. 

President Joe Biden spoke at the State Department Thursday and demanded that Russia release Alexei Navalny 'immediately'

President Joe Biden spoke at the State Department Thursday and demanded that Russia release Alexei Navalny 'immediately' 

Russian President Vladimir Putin
Russian opposition politician Alexei Navalny

President Joe Biden said at the State Department he would not 'roll over' to Russian President Vladimir Putin (left) and called on Putin to release opposition leader Alexei Navalny (right) 

President Joe Biden also had a message for Chinese President Xi Jinping (pictured), saying that the U.S. would 'take on' China, but also work with its 'most serious competitor' on issues that benefit the American people

President Joe Biden also had a message for Chinese President Xi Jinping (pictured), saying that the U.S. would 'take on' China, but also work with its 'most serious competitor' on issues that benefit the American people 

'We'll confront China's economic abuses, counter its aggressive coercive action [and] push back on China's attack on human rights, intellectual property and global governance,' Biden said. 

'But we're ready to work with Beijing when it's in America's interest to do so,' the new president added. 

Biden made the same point about Russia, explaining why he agreed to extend the START treaty for five years. 

'To preserve the only remaining treaty between our countries safeguarding nuclear stability,' Biden said. 

'At the same time, I made it clear to President Putin, in a manner very different from my predecessor, that the days of the United States rolling over in the face of Russia's aggressive actions interfering with our elections, cyber attacks, poisoning its citizens, are over,' the president said.

Biden spoke with Putin six days into his presidency and said he would not hesitate to 'raise the cost on Russia' if need be.  

Biden called Navalny's imprisonment 'politically motivated.' 

'And the Russian efforts to suppress freedom of expression and peaceful assembly are a matter of deep concern to us and the international community,' Biden said. 

'Mr. Navalny, like all Russian citizens, is entitled to his rights under the Russian constitution,' the president continued. 'He's been targeted targeted for exposing corruption. He should be released immediately and without condition.'  

Navalny, the Russian opposition leader, was poisoned in August and then arrested last month for violating parole stemming from a 2014 charge, which had barred him from running for office. 

At the State Department, Biden also took on Myanmar's coup. 

'There should be no doubt that in a democracy force should never seek to overrule the will of the people or attempt to erase the outcome of a credible election,' Biden said. 'The Burmese military should relinquish power they have seized, release the advocates and activists and officials they have detained, lift the restrictions on telecommunications and refrain from violence.'   

Throughout his remarks, Biden admitted that he believed the U.S. reputation had been badly damaged by President Donald Trump's 'America First' posturing - and by the January 6 insurrection on Capitol Hill. 

'Though many of these values have come under intense pressure in recent years, even pushed to the brink in the last few weeks,' Biden said. 'The American people are going to emerge from this moment stronger, more determined and better equipped to united the world in fighting to defend democracy, because we have fought for it ourselves.'  

He pointed to some of the first moves he made in office domestically as proof the U.S. was back on track. 

Internationally, he said moving up the refugee cap - 125,000 in his first fiscal year in office - would also send the world the right message. 

'So today I'm approving an executive order to begin the hard work of restoring our refugee admissions program to help meet the unprecedented global need,' Biden announced.

'It's going to take time to rebuild what has been so badly damaged, but that's precisely what we're going to do,' the president said.  

Secretary of State Tony Blinken (right) welcomes President Joe Biden (left) to the State Department on Thursday, marking Biden's first trip to a cabinet agency

Secretary of State Tony Blinken (right) welcomes President Joe Biden (left) to the State Department on Thursday, marking Biden's first trip to a cabinet agency 

By choosing Foggy Bottom as his first Cabinet stop - as opposed to the Pentagon or another department - Biden is making a heavily symbolic gesture to an agency suffering from morale problems in the wake of Trump's presidency. 

'We are grateful to both of you for visiting us so early on in the administration. Despite the remnants of snow outside, we know that you want to make the State Department as strong as it possibly can be for the country,' Blinken said in his initial remarks to greet Biden and Harris.  

In his speech Biden told State Department employees, 'I value your expertise and I respect you and I will have your back.' 

'This administration is going to empower you to do your jobs, not target or politicize you,' he pledged. 

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said during the trip the president will thank staff 'who are Foreign Service officers, civil servants, who are the heart and soul of that institution and, frankly, our government.'

She said Biden's remarks shouldn't be interpreted as a complete vision of his foreign policy plans.  

'This will not be a laydown of his vision for every issue and every foreign policy issue. He will have plenty of time to do that,' Psaki noted at her Wednesday press briefing.

National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan said President Joe Biden will end support for Saudi Arabia's controversial war in Yemen and will freeze Donald Trump's plan to withdraw some U.S. troops stationed in Germany

National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan said President Joe Biden will end support for Saudi Arabia's controversial war in Yemen and will freeze Donald Trump's plan to withdraw some U.S. troops stationed in Germany

In making the State Department his first Cabinet stop as president, Joe Biden is making a heavily symbolic gesture to an agency suffering from morale problems in the wake of Trump's presidency

In making the State Department his first Cabinet stop as president, Joe Biden is making a heavily symbolic gesture to an agency suffering from morale problems in the wake of Trump's presidency

Trump took an isolationist view in his foreign policy and didn't visit the State Department for more than a year into his presidency - to see Mike Pompeo sworn in as secretary after Trump fired Rex Tillerson. 

It was his first and only visit, Trump also accused officials at Foggy Bottom of being part of the 'deep state' out to undermine his presidency.

Biden, who spent years as chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, is expected to be much more engaged in foreign policy during his time in the White House. 

'No one has ever brought as much foreign policy expertise and experience to the presidency as Joe Biden. For the two decades I've worked for him, I've just been trying to keep up,' Blinken said during Biden's visit.  

He's already returned the United States to international agreements and organizations that Trump withdrew from - including the Paris Climate Accord and the World Health Organization.

Biden also has endorsed a multilateral approach to issues ranging from the coronavirus pandemic to China and Iran. 

'We can make America, once again, the leading force for good in the world,' he said in his inaugural address.

And the president chose his longtime confidant, Blinken, to be his secretary of State.

Blinken has vowed to take politics out of the department.

'I am determined to put our career folks in positions of responsibility and leadership, and I am absolutely determined that politics are not going to come into this building,' he told NBC News' Andrea Mitchell in an interview last week. 

On his first day at Foggy Bottom, in remarks to staff, Blinken told them: 'I will have your back.'

'It starts with rebuilding morale and trust. This is a priority for me because we need a strong department for the United States to be strong in the world,' he said.     

Although Biden's first nominations and appointments to senior positions at State have trended heavily toward political appointees, the president and Blinken have pledged to promote career staffers.

The State Department visit comes after Biden moved on Wednesday to extend the last remaining treaty limiting Russian and American stockpiles of nuclear weapons, acting just two days before the pact was set to expire. 

It also follows days after a coup in Myanmar that has emerged as an early proving ground of Biden's approach to multilateralism.

Prior to Biden's visit, the White House said Thursday that Biden will end support for Saudi Arabia's controversial war in Yemen - his first major foreign policy reversal. 

President Barack Obama began support for Saudi Arabia and President Donald Trump ramped it up, but Biden announced during his visit to the State Department that it's ending.

'We're also stepping up our diplomacy to end the war in Yemen, a war which has created a humanitarian and strategic catastrophe,' Biden said. 

National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan had previewed the move at the briefing.  

'Today he will announce an end to American support for offensive operations in Yemen,' Sullivan said. 

The move would fulfill a campaign pledge by Biden, whose administration plans to pursue diplomacy to end the overall conflict in Yemen. 

Sullivan also said Biden will freeze Trump's planned withdrawal of some U.S. troops stationed in Germany.

Biden explained that Blinken and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin would be leading a review of how American forces are being used 'so that our military footprint is appropriately aligned with our foreign policy and national security priorities.' 

'We'll be stopping any planned troop withdrawals from Germany,' Biden said.

Biden also is announcing the choice of Timothy Lenderking as special envoy to Yemen when he speaks to State Department employees. Lenderking has been a deputy assistant secretary of state in the agency's Middle East section. A career foreign service member, he has served in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and other countries inside and out of the Middle East.

Saudi Arabia began the offensive in 2015 to counter a Yemeni Houthi faction that had seized territory in Yemen and was launching cross-border missiles at Saudi Arabia.

A Saudi-led air campaign since then has killed numerous civilians, and survivors display fragments showing the bombs to be American-made. 

The conflict has deepened hunger and poverty in Yemen, and international rights experts say both the Gulf countries and Houthis have committed severe rights abuses. 

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2021-02-04 20:28:00Z
52781350750989

Yemen war: US 'to end support' for offensive operations - BBC News

Children play near a building damaged by bombing, Yemen (file pic - November 2018)
Reuters

The US is set to announce an end to its support for offensive operations in Yemen, which has been devastated by a six-year war in which more than 110,000 people are believed to have died.

The policy change by the new president, Joe Biden, was announced by his national security adviser on Thursday.

Under Mr Biden's two predecessors, the US backed a coalition led by Saudi Arabia against rebels in Yemen.

The conflict has left millions of Yemenis on the brink of starvation.

Fighting began in 2014 between a weak Yemeni government and the Houthi rebel movement. It escalated a year later, when Saudi Arabia and eight other Arab states - backed by the US, the UK and France - began air strikes against the Houthis.

What does the announcement mean?

The decision would affect US support for offensive operations in the war between the Yemeni government and the Houthis, including the sale of precision-guided munitions to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), US National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan told a briefing in Washington.

It did not extend to operations against al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, he said.

Mr Biden is also expected to announce a special envoy for Yemen later on Thursday - expected to be named as Tim Lenderking, an experienced diplomat and Middle East specialist, sources told the BBC.

The Biden administration has already put a temporary halt on arms sales to Saudi Arabia and the UAE.

This marks a change of tack from Mr Trump's administration, which increased support for the Saudi-led coalition. Last month Mr Trump's Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo, announced that the Houthis were being designated a "terrorist organisation".

He said the aim was to hold the Houthis accountable for cross-border attacks and deter "malign activity" by their backer Iran.

Aid organisations criticised the move, warning that it could prevent them from operating in areas where millions are in urgent need of food aid.

Last week, the Biden administration said it would exempt certain transactions involving the Houthis from sanctions. That exemption will expire on 26 February.

The United Nations says Yemen is the world's worst humanitarian crisis, with 80% of the population in need of aid or protection.

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Analysis box by Lyse Doucet, chief international correspondent

These announcements confirm President Biden's pledge to end Yemen's destructive war. Halting US support to the Saudi-led coalition's offensive operations won't close this bloody chapter, but it sends a strong signal to leaders in Riyadh and Abu Dhabi - they've also been trying to find ways to extricate themselves from this quagmire.

Achieving peace among Yemen's bitter enemies will be a monumental challenge. Tim Lenderking is set to be the first US envoy for Yemen since this war was unleashed nearly six years ago. He's worked on this file for years and is known to everyone who matters.

Western diplomats, as well as Yemenis, have welcomed this new US engagement. In 2015, President Obama gave a green light to the Saudi-led campaign, partly to ease the Kingdom's anger over the Iran nuclear deal. Now new US envoys on Yemen, and Iran, are tasked with ending this war, and the regional rivalries which still fuel it.

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https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiNWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL3dvcmxkLW1pZGRsZS1lYXN0LTU1OTQxNTg40gE5aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuYmJjLmNvLnVrL25ld3MvYW1wL3dvcmxkLW1pZGRsZS1lYXN0LTU1OTQxNTg4?oc=5

2021-02-04 19:49:00Z
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