Western Sahara has
been dubbed Africa's last colony. Its struggle for self-determination has
embraced everything from armed conflict to passive resistance. UN diplomacy has
consistently failed to break the impasse over the fate of the disputed
territories. A national referendum was promised after a UN-brokered ceasefire
in 1991, in which the population could vote for complete independence or
integration with Morocco; but the plan stalled when Rabat and Polisario
disagreed over who was entitled to vote. The UN continues to push for a
negotiated settlement. In December, Christopher Ross, personal envoy in the
dispute to the UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon, admitted the situation was at
a stalemate. Morocco remains implacably opposed to independence but says it is
prepared to talk about "autonomy". France, which has strong
historical links with Morocco, has consistently opposed calls for UN action
against Rabat by exercising its veto in the Security Council.
The mineral-rich country (which may explain the relucance to
give it independence) on Africa's north-west Atlantic coast is bounded by
Morocco in the north, Mauritania in the south and Algeria to the east. All
three countries have taken an active interest in the fate of the Sahrawi - not
always altruistically. Spain, the former colonial power, relinquished the
territory in 1975 to Morocco, which has formally claimed the land since 1957.
An extensive wall was built through the desert to exclude the Polisario Front -
the Sahrawi liberation movement from coming into the country from refugee camps
in neighbouring Algeria. Adala, a British NGO, recently submitted a report to
the European Parliament and the UN Commission for Human Rights highlighting the
regular human rights abuses taking place in the region. Sahrawi protestors face
persistent harassment and persecution by security forces. Peaceful
demonstrations are routinely disrupted by state violence and those taking part
have been illegally detained. Beccy Allen, of Adala UK, said it was essential
the UN mission in the territory was given a human rights mandate. "There
are plenty of white UN vehicles around but they don't intervene on human rights
issues. They are the only UN mission around the world without one and that has
to change," she said.
Now the Sahrawi
people are trying to break the deadlock themselves - in the courts. In December
it managed to put a stick in the spokes of the European Union's agriculture
agreement with Morocco. Many of the tomatoes sold in British and European
supermarkets are labelled as Moroccan produce, but most are grown in Western
Sahara. The EU's Court of Justice ruled last month that the favourable tariffs
Morocco enjoys should not apply to goods from the territories it occupies. The
EU failed to consider the impact on the rights with the Sahrawi people when it
signed the deal, the court ruled. Campaigners in Britain are taking legal
action to stop Moroccan exports to the UK enjoying similar tax breaks.
Spurred by its success, Polisario has brought a further case
to the EU courts over an EU-Moroccan fisheries deal, which includes the
territorial waters of the Sahrawi people. Norway has already started fining any
of its vessels which trawl in Western Saharan waters. Oil companies such as
Total which have explored for off and on-shore oil fields are facing growing
local and international criticism, as are companies that import Western
Sahara's minerals, including its massive phosphate deposits. United States,
Canadian and Australian miners have all been blacklisted by Scandinavian
pension firms.
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