Friday, August 26, 2005

Historical Overview


Western Sahara, is a territory of (266,000 sq km), North West Africa. It borders on the Atlantic Ocean in the west, on Morocco in the north (443 km), on Algeria in the northeast (42 km), and on Mauritania in the east and south (1, 561 km).
Part of the Sahara, it is extremely arid and is almost entirely covered with stones, gravel, or sand. Rocky highlands in the east reach c.1, 500 ft (460 m). It is mostly low, flat desert with large areas of rocky or sandy surfaces rising to small mountains in south and northeast.

There is evidence of trade between the Western Sahara and Europe by the 4th cent. B.C. Portuguese navigators reached Cape Bojador on the northern coast of present-day Western Sahara in 1434. However, there was little European contact with the region until the 19th cent. In 1884, and as a consequence of the Berlin Conference, Spain claimed a protectorate over the coast from Cape Bojador to Cap Blanc (at the present border with Mauritania). The boundaries of the protectorate were extended by Franco-Spanish agreements in 1900, 1904, and 1920. Smara was not captured until 1934, and the Spanish had only slight contact with the interior until the 1950s. In 1957, a Saharawi Resistance movement ousted the Spanish, who regained control of the region with French and Moroccan help in Feb., 1958.
In Apr., 1958, Spain joined the previously separate districts of Saguia el Hamra (in the north) and Río de Oro (in the south) to form by a Royal Decree the province of Spanish Sahara. The UN declared the right of non-self-governing territories and placed Western Sahara on its agenda for decolonization in 1966. In the early 1970s, dissidents formed organizations seeking independence for the province. In May 1973, The Polisario Front was found, still today the unique and legitimate representative of the Saharawi people and fought with armed struggle for the independence of Western Sahara. At the same time, the UN pressured Spain to call a referendum on the area's future in accordance with UN resolutions. Continuing guerrilla warfare in the 1970s, The Madrid Agreement of 1975 to hand over “Spanish Sahara” to the neighboring countries and a march of over 300,000 Moroccans into the territory in 1975, led to Spain's withdrawal from the province in 1976, when it was renamed Western Sahara.
Upon Spain's withdrawal, and as agreed in Madrid, Morocco and Mauritania subdivided the region, with Morocco controlling the northern two thirds and Mauritania the southern third. The international Court of Justice ruled out the Moroccan claims of sovereignty over Western Sahara. The Polisario Front waged guerrilla warfare against the two nations and proclaimed the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic. In 1979, Mauritania withdrew from its portion, which was taken over by Morocco. Polisario continued its attacks on Moroccan strongholds. To hold control of the territory, Morocco used Napalm and White Phosphorous against the defenseless Saharawis. The brutal illegal Moroccan invasion of the territory caused thousands of refugees to flee into neighboring Algerian desert, living under tents in the most inhospitable place of the world, depending entirely on International Aid and eventually Morocco built a 2000Km sophisticated isolating defensive wall around the area. A UN-monitored cease-fire was implemented in 1991, and a referendum was to decide the territory's future. Disputes regarding who would be permitted to vote delayed the referendum in the following years, during which time the two third of the territory is still illegally integrated administratively into Morocco. The 1991 peace accords included an agreement on the carrying out of a referendum among the indigenous population. The referendum was planned to give the population the option between independence or inclusion to Morocco. The referendum has, however, to this date not been carried out due to the conflict over who is entitled to vote and the Moroccans intransigence to include thousands of their own citizens in the electoral body. UN attempts to broker a peace agreement have been unsuccessful, with Morocco generally rejecting any plan that might affect its sovereignty over the area, even though this claim is far from universally recognized and in fact a majority of other nations do not recognize the Moroccan claim.
Beside its reluctant attitude to a just and democratic solution to the conflict, Morocco, which is classified universally one of the worst regime for its records on Human rights, persists in its fragrant human rights abuses against the helpless Saharawis in the occupied zones of Western Sahara, which has been for many decades under terrible military siege and media black-out.

Friday, August 19, 2005

Western Sahara:Based and undoubted Facts:

Western Sahara

Based and undoubted Facts:

a)- 1727 Marrakesh Treaty and 1799 Meknes Treaty: successively a treaty signed between Spain and Sultan Sidi Moulay Souleiman of Morocco and treaty signed between Spain and Sultan Sidi Mohamed Ben Abdallah of Morocco: Morocco officially refrains from any responsibility over Western Sahara.

b)- Dec. 1884 : The Spanish Government announced, by royal decree, its intention to take possession of Western Sahara. Morocco raised no finger.

c)- 1899: Battles at Daora between Saharawi resistance and Moroccan troops proves Saharawi reluctance to foreign aggression.

d)- Feb.1958: Military treaty signed between Spain and France, with the full cooperation of the Moroccan regime. Through the “Ecouvillon Operation”, the Saharawi liberation army was destroyed.

e)- Dec. 14th 1960: The United Nations adopted the resolution 1514 (XV) in a Declaration granting independence to colonilized countries and peoples.

f)-1961: Western Sahara was declared a "Spanish province". Morocco by then an independent state put no objection.

g)- 1963: The U.N. included Western Sahara in the list of countries to be decolonized. Dec. 1965: The U.N. General Assembly reaffirmed the inalienable right of self-determination by the Saharawi people and requested Spain to end its colonial rule.
h)- June 1966, Morocco and Mauritania support the right of the people of Western Sahara to self-determination and independence at meeting of the UN Special Committee on Decolonization.
i)- July 23-24,1973, Houari Boumedienne, Hassan II and Mokhtar Ould Daddah call for self-determination to be exercised in Western Sahara in line with UN resolutions at a summit conference in Agadir , Morocco.
j)- 1975, A UN visiting mission tours the country, witnessing unprecedented pro-Polisario demonstrations (May 12-19) and later reporting that the overwhelming majority of Saharawis want independence and reject the territorial claims of Morocco and Mauritania.

k)- June 25-July 30,1975,The International Court of Justice holds its sessions in The Hague on the Western Sahara problem. Its verdict excluded by proofs any Moroccan sovereignty over Western Sahara and that its people are entitled to self-determination.

l)- Nov. 14, 1975, Madrid Agreement between Spanish, Moroccan and Mauritanian officials, Morocco in contradiction and controversy with its present claims accepted to share Western Sahara with Mauritania and its natural resources with Spain.

Total tystnad om övergrepp i Västsahara

Total tystnad om övergrepp i Västsahara


Från de ockuperade delarna av Västsahara kommer sedan slutet av maj dramatiska rapporter om övergrepp mot civilbefolkningen. Västsaharier, som har deltagit i fredliga demonstrationer mot Marockos ockupation, har gripits och torterats av marockansk polis och militär.
Västsaharas president Mohamed Abdelaziz har i upprepade brev till både FN och EU vädjat om skydd för den västsahariska befolkningen. Inte ett enda officiellt svar har kommit.
104 EU-parlamentariker uppmanade i juni FN:s generalsekreterare Kofi Annan att tvinga Marocko att omedelbart upphöra med förföljelserna. De krävde också att en undersökningskommission skickas till området.
Trots att en FN-styrka finns på plats sedan 1991 för att genomföra en folkomröstning om Västsaharas självständighet, tiger FN och EU om övergreppen. Hur är detta möjligt?
Skandalartade rättegångar
I slutet av juni föll de första marockanska domarna mot de gripna. Rättegångarna har beskrivits som skandalartade. En 19-åring och en 18-åring dömdes till 20 respektive 15 års fängelse för att ha förstört en marockansk flagga, skapat kriminella gäng och använt vapen. Bevis saknades och de åtalade uppgav att de utsatts för tortyr.
Den marockanska säkerhetstjänsten har inlett en klappjakt på västsahariska aktivister. Övergreppen har pågått hela sommaren. Bland de gripna finns Aminettou Haidar och Ali Salem Tamek, två välkända försvarare av mänskliga rättigheter och för självständighet. De har förts till det ökända Svarta fängelset i El Aaiún.
Amnesty International skriver i en rapport den 1 augusti att västsahariska människorättsaktivister har arresterats, torterats och dömts enbart för att de förespråkar ett självständigt Västsahara.
De ockuperade delarna av Västsahara är en sluten värld. Åtta olika spanska och internationella delegationer med parlamentariker och oberoende journalister har sedan slutet av maj försökt ta sig in Västsahara för att med egna ögon se vad som händer. Samtliga har avvisats på flygplatsen i El Aaiún av den marockanska ockupationsmakten.
Större delen av Västsahara är ockuperat av Marocko sedan 1975. Många västsaharier bor sedan dess i flyktingläger i Algeriet. Västsahara, som dessförinnan var en spansk koloni, ska enligt FN avkoloniseras. Någon folkomröstning har inte ägt rum på grund av Marockos vägran.
Ekonomiskt stöd
Marocko är sedan länge västvärldens allierade i arabvärlden. Frankrike och USA har särskilt goda förbindelser. Marocko är en av EU:s största mottagare av ekonomiskt stöd. I augusti i år tecknade EU ett fiskeavtal med Marocko, där de västsahariska vattnen är inkluderade. Detta strider mot internationell lag. Amerikanska och franska oljebolag har prospekterat för olja i västsahariska vatten.
Marockos ockupation, förföljelse av civilbefolkning och brott mot FN-resolutioner tigs ihjäl. Krassa ekonomiska och storpolitiska intressen betyder uppenbarligen mer.
Vad gör den svenska regeringen och riksdagspartierna för västsaharierna just nu?

Lena Thunberg
tidskriften Västsahara