Yemen’s government, Houthis agree to exchange thousands of prisoners

3 hours ago 7

Nearly 3,000 detainees to be released under latest prisoner swap deal reached during talks in Oman.

Published On 23 Dec 2025

Yemen’s internationally recognised government and the Houthi group have reached an agreement to free detainees, according to the United Nations, with officials from both sides putting the number at thousands.

In a statement on Tuesday, the UN envoy on Yemen Hans Grundberg said the prisoner swap deal came after nearly two weeks of talks in Muscat, the capital of Oman, a mediator in the conflict between the government and the Houthis that began in 2014.

Abdulqader al-Mortada, an official with the Houthi delegation in Muscat, said in a statement on X that “we signed an agreement today with the other party to implement a large-scale prisoner exchange deal involving 1,700 of our prisoners in exchange for 1,200 of theirs, including seven Saudis and 23 Sudanese”.

Majed Fadhail, a member of the government delegation, said the new exchange would see “thousands” of war prisoners released, according to the AFP news agency.

Two of the seven Saudi nationals are air force pilots, Fadhail told AFP.

Grundberg, the UN envoy, welcomed the agreement as a “positive and meaningful step” and said it would help to ease the suffering of detainees and their families across Yemen.

He added that its “effective implementation will require the continued engagement and cooperation of the parties, coordinated regional support and sustained efforts to build on this progress toward further releases”.

The war in Yemen has been largely frozen since 2022, but tensions have risen in recent weeks as the separatist Southern Transitional Council made military advances in the country’s eastern governorates of Hadramout and al-Mahra.

Overall, the conflict has killed tens of thousands people and created one of the world’s worst humanitarian disasters. According to the UN, nearly 20 million people across Yemen depend on aid to survive, while close to five million remain displaced.

Read Entire Article
International | | | |