More than four years after seizing the capital, the Houthis have consolidated their grip over large parts of Yemen.


More than four years after seizing the capital, the Houthis have consolidated their grip over large parts of Yemen.

Home to more than six million tonnes of salt, camel caravans still take the precious resource to Ethiopia.

Scores of refugees have refused to be housed in Saudi-funded units over the kingdom’s military campaign in Yemen.

Yemenis fear they could suffocate due to intermittent electricity and soaring temperatures in new housing units.

Most Yemenis living with HIV/AIDS face stigma and discrimination, even from their own families.

A high ranking member of the rebel movement speaks to Al Jazeera about the Houthis’ endgame in Yemen.

The Yemen Peace Newsroom aims to offer objective reporting from talks in Sweden against a backdrop of partisan coverage.
![Yemen Talks [Faisal Edroos/Al Jazeera]](https://aljazeeranews.edgeone.app/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/bf917426c5df41c698142c92c36a935c_18.jpeg?resize=270%2C180&quality=80)
As some of the key players in Yemen’s war meet in Sweden, is peace finally within reach?

Sources tell Al Jazeera that Abu al-Abbas, a Yemeni designated by the US as a terrorist, is receiving UAE support.

The absence of 42 boys who were killed in a Saudi-led attack on a school bus weighs heavily on young survivors.
