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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’.

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Oct 24, 2013

Sahrawis clash with police as UN envoy visits | Global Post of today




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Bloody clashes erupted between police and pro-independence protesters in Western Sahara, a human rights group said Monday, as the UN envoy wrapped up his latest visit to the disputed territory.

The weekend clashes, in the towns of Laayoune and Smara, coincided with a three-day trip to the territory by Christopher Ross in a new bid to push for a peaceful resolution to the decades-old conflict.

Dozens of civilians required hospital treatment, including women and children, after police moved to break up a "peaceful protest" on Saturday evening in Laayoune, the territory's main city, the Moroccan Human Rights Association (AMDH) said.

"The police violently dispersed protesters and surrounded the residential Maatalla district, breaking into people's houses and causing a lot of damage," the independent rights group's Laayoune representative Hamoud Iguilid told AFP.

Moroccan security forces also wounded 20 civilians on Sunday afternoon in Smara, as Ross arrived in the town in the desert interior east of Laayoune for talks with officials and civil society representatives, an AMDH source there said.

But local authorities, cited by the official MAP news agency, contradicted the AMDH's version of events in Laayoune, saying five members of the security forces were wounded in "acts of vandalism and violence."

Some 400 people gathered in the city "without permission" and began throwing stones and petrol bombs, according to the authorities, who made no mention of civilian casualties and strongly denied that police had broken into people's houses.

Morocco annexed the former Spanish colony in 1975 in a move never recognised by the international community, while neighbouring Algeria backs the pro-independence Polisario Front and hosts Sahrawi refugee camps.

The UN special envoy flew to Western Sahara on Friday for meetings with local Moroccan officials, tribal chiefs and civil society representatives, both for and against independence.

He had already visited Rabat and the refugee camps in Algeria and left the territory on Monday for neighbouring Mauritania.

He has made no public comments during his tour.

The AMDH said that it urged the UN envoy to set up a mechanism for monitoring human rights in both Western Sahara and the Polisario-run refugee camps.

Earlier this year, aggressive international lobbying by Rabat successfully shot down an unprecedented US proposal to task the territory's UN peacekeeping force, known as MINURSO, with human rights monitoring.

Instead, a UN Security Council resolution extending the force's mandate simply stressed the "importance of improving the human rights situation" in Western Sahara and the refugee camps.

In the weeks after the Security Council vote, scores of pro-independence protesters were wounded in clashes with Moroccan security forces in Laayoune and other towns.

A MINURSO spokesman on Monday reported a "massive" Moroccan security presence in Laayoune over the weekend, but declined to comment on or confirm clashes between police and protesters, saying the force was not authorised to do so.

Separately, a representative



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