Thursday, September 22, 2011

WESTERN SAHARA PEOPLE WAS THE FIRST ONE IN THE SO-CALLED "ARAB SPRING"

There is no dout that the small and peaceful people of Western Sahara was the first one to begin with the peaceful demostrations that we have witnessed these great changings in the arab countries particularly in the northern part the african continent.
However and unfortunatelly, in the case of the Western Sahara People´s demands were brutally repressed and violently dismantled when the moroccan army fiercely intervened against the peaceful Camps in Gdeim Izik, 15 kilometers from El-AAiun.
The famous spanish newspaper has recently published an interesting article on the so-called "Arab Spring". The North-African expert journalist, Ignacio Cembrero has publishes a long interview with a well-known saharawi whom live in the occupided citties of Western Sahara.
On 4 November, 2010, Elabadila Chbihna Maaelaynine left his home in Casablanca to fly to Laâyoune, the capital of Western Sahara. Although he is well integrated into Moroccan society, with a well-paid job as a computer programmer, as a Sahrawi he says he felt he had to see the Agdaym Izik camp set up by some 12,000 refugees a month earlier in the outskirts of the city. Five days later, Moroccan police forcibly dismantled the camp, leaving at least 12 people dead, among them several police officers.
Just under three months later, on February 20, Maaelaynine was among the thousands attending a peaceful demonstration in the Moroccan capital of Rabat calling for constitutional and political reform in Morocco that would include a solution to the conflict in Western Sahara.
"Western Sahara was where the first Arab revolts took place, but unlike in Tunisia and Egypt, there has been no happy ending," says the 46-year-old, whose great-grandfather[A1]  was Sheikh Maaelaynine, a local tribal leader who stood up to the French and Spanish colonizers a century ago, and who founded the former Spanish colony's religious capital Smara.
The Western Sahara conflict is both one of the world's oldest and one of its most neglected. More than 30 years after the war began, following Spain's hasty departure and Morocco's land grab, the displacement of large numbers of people and a ceasefire in 1991 that froze military positions, its end remains remote.
Maaelaynine has been campaigning discreetly for reform in Morocco for several years: in 2003, shortly before Rabat offered limited autonomy to Western Sahara, he published an article in the weekly Le Journal calling for greater political independence, along with a bigger share of the revenue from the region's vast mineral wealth. He is now one of the leaders of the February 20 movement, which continues to hold peaceful protests every Sunday in cities throughout Morocco. He blames the Moroccan authorities for the violence that ensued when the police raided the camp.
Mohammed Ghalous, the government representative for the Laâyoune region, said the gendarmerie and auxiliary forces had moved in "to end a situation which had exhausted all means of dialogue," by dismantling the camp.
The Polisario Front movement, which seeks independence for the Western Sahara, accused the security forces of injuring hundreds of people in the dawn raid on the camp. The security forces raided the camp by ground and air, using helicopters.
Maaelaynine condemns the violence, and says that the organizers of the protest camp were extremely careful not to provoke the Moroccan authorities, and imposed careful checks on who entered the camp, banning Polisario flags, for example. He says that those responsible for the deaths of the Moroccan police officers should be brought to justice. "But I have no respect for a regime that cracked down in this way on people who were staging a peaceful protest," he adds.
The unrest in November came ahead of yet another failed round of talks between Morocco and the Polisario Front. The latter wants a UN-organized self-determination referendum, with independence as one of the options. Morocco has so far rejected any proposal that goes beyond greater autonomy.
Saharawi Women launch an urgent appeal to the United Nations and the European Union and all the peace-loving countries and persons all over the world for puting presure on the government of Morocco to respetct the democratic demands of the saharawi people, to respect the human rights in the saharawi occupided cities and to implement the UN resolutions on the Africa´s last colony: Western Sahara.