The only aspiration of Western Sahara people is to return one day to their own country, far away from the Morocco violation.
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The Occupation We Choose to Ignore’
Do you know who I am? I am a Sahrawi. The land to which I refer is what is known today as the non-self-governing territory ofWestern Sahara. My country was colonized by the Spanish and the French between 1884 and 1975, divided in two and occupied by Moroccan and Mauritanian forces thereafter, and has been ruled exclusively by the Kingdom of Morocco from 1979 until the present.
The Western Sahara: forgotten first source of the Arab Spring
this is one part of the Arab Spring that western governments don't want to talk about. And their silence, and the UN's complicity in it, is why that repression continues, and a terrible injustice is perpetuated.
ISS - News - The Western Sahara and North African People’s Power
Respect the right of individuals to peacefully express their opinions regarding the status and future of the Western Sahara and to document violations of human rights
King of Morocco to be biggest benefactor of EU trade agreement - Telegraph
it has emerged that the single biggest beneficiary of the deal will be the King of Morocco, who is head of one of the three largest agricultural producers in the north African country and lays claim to 12,000 hectares of the nation's most fertile farmland.
North African Dispatches Africa’s Forgotten Colony
Oblivion it seems is the current reality for the arid North African territory of Western Sahara; often referred to as Africa’s ‘Last Colony’. In my opinion, it would be more accurate to describe it as ‘Africa’s Forgotten Colony’.
May 23, 2012
Morocco's Short-Sighted Politics | FPIF | Western Sahara Update
May 16, 2012
Norway fends off AGF from Western Sahara | Western Sahara Update
Norway fends off AGF from Western Sahara
Some producers supply tomatoes, zucchini and melons to French supermarkets, which get sold with the origin as Morocco. But in fact these products from the Western Sahara.
Latin American Herald Tribune - Bardem’s Documentary Wins Prize (VIDEO) | Western Sahara Update
Bardem’s Documentary Wins Prize (VIDEO) By Virginia HebreroSAHARAWI REFUGEE CAMP IN DAKHLA, Algeria – The documentary “Hijos de las nubes, la ultima colonia” (Sons of the Clouds, the Last Colony) produced by and starring Javier Bardem, is the winner of the White Camel award, the top honor handed out at the Sahara Film Festival, or FiSahara, that took place this weekend at this refugee camp. Directed by Alvaro Longoria, the film analyzing the political and strategic interests that are hampering the resolution of the Saharawi conflict was screened in Dakhla before it is due to hit Spanish theaters in a few weeks but after being presented at the Berlin Film Festival. In the documentary, Bardem leads the viewer through the roots of the conflict up to the current situation of stagnation and obscurity of the Saharawi people. Neither Bardem nor Longoria traveled to Dakhla, but the prize – which was awarded on Saturday by a popular panel at the non-competitive festival, the only one in the world held in a refugee camp – was to be accepted by sound technician Charlie Schmukler from the hands of actress Aitana Sanchez Gijon. The festival’s co-director, actor Willy Toledo, told Efe that it was “predictable” that “Hijos de las nubes” would take the top award because “always when there is a great film that deals with the Saharawi conflict, like ‘El problema’ two years ago, it is greatly appreciated here.” Bardem’s documentary “has a focus on high politics, the corridors of the U.N., world leaders, that had not been seen in other films with a Saharawi theme, and beyond that it’s very educational for whose who aren’t familiar with the conflict,” Toledo said. Breaking the tradition of offering a real camel to the Saharawi family who hosted Bardem at the camp during the 2008 FiSahara festival, when the idea for the documentary was born, the organizers decided to donate it to the Saharawi police force that currently guarantees the safety of the public and of the event’s invited guests. That was to avoid a recurrence of something like the dramatic kidnapping more than six months ago at the Saharawi camps of three aid workers – Spaniards Ainhoa Fernandez and Enric Gonyalons, and Italian Rosella Urru – to whom the festival paid tribute. Two special mentions will be made at the festival, one of them regarding the documentary “Gdeim Izik: detonante de la primavera arabe,” which tells about the creation and displacement, in November 2010, of the Saharawi camp in the area occupied by Morocco established at El Aaiun, a protest that some analysts felt was the beginning of the so-called Arab Spring throughout the Middle East and North Africa. EFE |
Participación de la UJSARIO en el congreso de la CJC (Juventud Comunista de Cataluña) | Western Sahara Update
Western Saharan activist: ‘We will be free, but we need help’ | Green Left Weekly | Western Sahara Update
Calls for end to Western Sahara imports | Video & TV News Clips | SBS World News | Western Sahara Update
Calls for end to Western Sahara imports
Saharawi Singer Aziza Brahim Releases La Tierra Derrama Lágrimas Music Video | Western Sahara Update
Saharawi Singer Aziza Brahim has a new music video titled La Tierra Derrama Lágrimas (the earth pours tears) filmed by Donal Scannell of Scanarama, from the upcoming album ‘Mabruk’ to be released on June 11.
| Western Sahara Update
'via Blog this'Call for Australia to stop Sahara phosphate imports
9 MAY 2012, 8:17 AM - SOURCE: GARETH BOREHAM, SBS
A Saharawi human rights activist is calling for Australia to stop phosphate imports from the strife-torn region of Western Sahara.
RELATED By Gareth Boreham, SBS
Western Sahara is one of the world's most hotly disputed regions. Rich in phosphate, it was once a Spanish colony, but is now claimed by Morocco and independence group the Polisario Front.
Morocco governs much of the area, referring to it as the Southern Provinces. But a strip of Western Sahara is ruled by the Polisario Front, they call it the 'Liberated Territories'.
It's separated from the rest of Western Sahara by a wall, flanked by landmines.
Human rights activist, Malak Amidan, who's visiting Australia, is calling for Australia to stop phosphate imports from the territory.
She fears she will be jailed by Moroccan authorities for speaking out.
Malak Amidan says workers in Western Sahara are exploited every day. None more so than those in the territory's phosphate industry.
"These people are poor. They haven't anything… and that's what we come for, to ask the Australian people to help us," she says.
She's urging our political leaders to stop Australian companies importing the product from the region.
I come here to look for help from the Australian people because my people live in a horrible situation because of the companies who come to Western Sahara and steal our natural resources," Amidan told SBS.
Her visit has been sponsored by Australian unions accusing Morocco of human rights abuses in the region.
But the Fertilizer Industry Federation says the three companies that do source high-grade phosphate rock from Western Saharan deposits - Wesfarmers, Impact Fertilisers and Incitec Pivot - have advice it is legal under international law with no trading restrictions imposed by the Federal Government.
As she seeks to educate Australians about the situation in her homeland, Malak Amidan claims she will be sent to prison on her return for speaking out and wearing the Western Saharan flag.
The Moroccan embassy in Canberra has hit back, accusing Malak Amidan of peddling "cheap propaganda".
Western Sahara was a colony of Spain until the European power pulled out in 1975.
Since then, it's been the subject of dispute between the power that seized control, Morocco, and the Algerian-backed force pushing for independence, the Polisario.
Tensions escalated in late 2010 with the sides blaming each other for the deaths of civilians and security forces during a riot at a refugee camp set up by displaced Saharwis in protest at their living conditions under Moroccan rule.
The Moroccan Government broke up the camp, accusing the Algerian secret service of financing the operation to de-stabilise the region.
In a bid to shake-off allegations of abuse, the embassy points to the on-going presence of a United Nations monitor in the region.
While Morocco has suggested some self-autonomy for Western Sahara, it's steadfast in maintaining its right to the territory's vast sands.
Leaving the world hoping the UN can still negotiate a political solution to the impasse.
Watch this story on YouTube:
The Western Sahara Peace Process: Tragedy or Farce? | Western Sahara Update
By Jacob Mundy on May 10, 2012
out in the UN Security Council. This is when the UN Mission for the Referendum in Western Sahara (MINURSO, its French acronym) comes up for its annual renewal. Western Sahara — Africa’s last colony according to the United Nations — is largely ignored by the Security Council the other eleven months of the year. The Secretary-General has a Person Envoy working on the case, former US Ambassador Christopher Ross, one of the great Arabophone diplomats of his age. The mandate given to Ambassador Ross, to achieve a mutually acceptable political solution that will afford Western Sahara its long denied right to self-determination, is a farce and everyone knows it.