Monday, October 5, 2009

AMINATOU HAIDAR IS IN A WORKING VISIT IN NIGERIA

The Saharawi Human Rights Activists, Aminatou Haidar is these days in a working visit in the sister Federal Republic of Nigeria. "The Saharawi Ghandi" as is internationally called, and and also 2009 FK Kenedy Human Rights Award is having a lot of meetings and talks with several offitial institutions and also NGO in the capital of Nigeria, Abuja and in Lagos for informing them about the warning situation in the occupied cities of Western Sahara.
The President of the Saharawi Collective of Human Rights Defenders (CODESA), Ms. Aminatou Haidar, met on Saturday morning with the President of the Nigerian movement of solidarity with the Saharawi people, Ms. Lady Ilia, in the Saharawi Embassy in Abuja. The meeting discussed the program of the week of solidarity with the Saharawi people that will be organised this week in Abuja, and which will be marked by the constitution of the first Nigerian movement of solidarity with the Saharawi people. During the meeting, Ms. Lady Ili, who is also the Deputy President of the Nigerian Labour Council (NLC/ the Nigerian Umbrella trade union), expressed her admiration and respect of the Saharawi people’s courage and legitimate struggle for independence. She recalled her visit to the Saharawi refugee camps last year and the positive impression this visit had on her as well as on the Nigerian delegation accompanying her, which was chaired by the President of the NLC, Mr. Abdulwahid Omar.
Ms. Lady Ili reiterated the principled position adopted by the Nigerian trade union, which is firmly supporting the Saharawi people’s right to self-determination and independence. On her side, the Saharawi human rights activist and ex-prisoner of conscience, Aminatou Haidar, thanked the Nigerian movement of solidarity, recalling that Nigeria was a fervent defender of all African liberation movement, including the struggle of the historic South African people against the Apartheid.The meeting was also attended from the Saharawi side, by the Saharawi Ambassador to Nigeria, Oubi Bouchraya Bachir, and the Secretary General of the Saharawi Journalists and Writers Union, Malainin Lakhal, in addition to the Nigerian Coordinator of the movement of solidarity in Nigeria, Mr. Nuhu Toro.Aminatou Haidar with the President of the Nigerian movement of solidarity

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

UN HIGH COMMISSIONER FOR REFUGEES HONORS KENNEDY´S EFFORTS FOR REFUGEES AMONG THEM THE SAHARAWI PEOPLE

The Saharawi Women as well as the whole people of Western Sahara are very pleased to see that the United Nations´s High Commissioner for Refugees, Mr. Antonio Guterres, has recognized the Senator Kennedy´s great efforts to help the refugees all over the world and specially the Saharawi refugees that are still living in refuggee camps due to the moroccan invasion and illegal occupation to the main cities of Western sahara.
Ted Kennedy was a steadfast defender of the Saharawi people’s right to determine its own future, in line with UN resolutions and international law. We are very pleased that the UN High Commissioner honors Kennedy’s effort for refugees around the world", said Ronny Hansen in The Norwegian Support Committee for Western Sahara.
Some of Kennedy's Western Sahara statements "Due to serious violations of the peace plan by the Government of Morocco, the [MINURSO] observers have been prevented from fostering an atmosphere of confidence and stability conducive to holding a free and fair referendum"Statement before the Senate Foreign Relations Africa Subcommittee, 1 Oct 1992."The ongoing crisis in the Western Sahara raises serious questions regarding the Government of Morocco's willingness to honor its international commitment to a free and fair referendum in the Western Sahara."Statement, January 1994"The International Court of Justice, the Organization of African Unity, the United States, and many nations throughout the world have not recognized Morocco's claim to the Western Sahara, but the Moroccan occupation continues."Statement, June 1999"Morocco gained the respect of the international community when it agreed in 1991 and again in 1997 to allow a referendum on the future of the Western Sahara. These actions demonstrated an impressive commitment to the right of self-determination for the people of the Western Sahara. The referendum is an important part of the peace process, and I hope that it will take place as soon as possible."Press release after meeting between Kennedy and King Mohammed VI, 22 June 2002.See also statement from 2000, in which Kennedy demands that US Secretary of State submits report to the Senate on progress of referendum.Time and again over several decades, Edward Kennedy championed the Western Sahara cause in the US Senate and the White House. He repeatedly criticized the US for not doing enough to pressure Morocco and strengthen the UN effort.
In 2000 he debated the issue directly with the Moroccan King, Mohammed VI. “The referendum is an important part of the peace process, and I hope that it will take place as soon as possible”, Kennedy said in a statement after the meeting. In announcing the 2009 Nansen award, UN High Commissioner for Refugees António Guterres said: "Senator Kennedy stood out as a forceful advocate for those who suddenly found themselves with no voice and no rights. Year after year, conflict after conflict, he put the plight of refugees on the agenda and drove through policies that saved and shaped countless lives.
"The Nansen Refugee Award is given annually to an individual or organization for outstanding work on behalf of refugees. Funded by Norway and Switzerland it was created in 1954 in honor of Fridtjof Nansen, the legendary Norwegian polar explorer and scientist, and the first High Commissioner for Refugees. In this role, he won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1922.
Kennedy made an enormous effort to put the Western Sahara issue on the political agenda. In 2008 he helped award the Saharawi human rights activist Aminatou Haidar the Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Award. "We have lost a loud and clear voice for the Saharawi people, but rejoice today in celebration of his life and service", said Hansen.

Monday, September 14, 2009

SINGER AAZIZA BRAHIM IN THE LONDON AFRICAN MUSICAL FESTIVAL

The Saharawi women express their warmest congratulation for the saharawi singer Aziza Brahim for her wonderful participation this past week-end and for the first time at the London African Music Festival
The young Saharawi singer has given a great concert in the Queen Elizabeth Hall in the framework of the London african Musical Festival in the british capital, London.
The Saharwi singer sings about the plight of her people, and dedicates all her songs to their struggle. Her songs titles say a lot about her engagement, when she sang for “Peace”; “sons of the clouds”; “the battle of Guelta”; “memory of the tanks”; and the song “return” to her people resisting for their right of self-determination and independence and above all the Saharawi people leaving the occupied territories of Western Sahara.

Commenting on this widely appreciated concert, Mr. Y. Lamine Baali, estimated that “this performance of the Saharawi raising star, Azizza Brahim, will undoubtedly contribute in making sure that the Saharawi culture is gradually taking its right place among other African cultures, music in particular, on the international level”.

In the backstage, the Saharawi singer meet with many MPs, diplomats, journalists and representatives of NGOs and activists of the UK Western Sahara campaign, in addition to students organizations and gave an interview to the BBC .

Since 2003 the London African Music Festival has been at the forefront of new African music and this year is no exception, with the festival featuring true legends – Oliver Mtukudzi, Lord Eric Sugumugu, the leader of the mighty Master Drummers of Africa, who premiers his new acoustic group, and maverick jazz organist Ed Bentley who leads his new high energy group that fuses hi-life with funk and jazz solos. As always the festival features women leaders with this year’s stars including The Yoruba Women Choir, Uganda’s diva Rachel Magoola, contemporary jazz saxophonist YolanDa Brown and Hilary Mwelwa leads her remarkable group, Hil St Soul. Tanzanian Fayyaz Virji’s trombone sound has been heard with everyone from Ray Charles to Jools Holland to The African Jazz Allstastars N’Faly Kouyate,Ba Cissoko and Prince Diabate Kora Trio.Guitarist Kunle Olasoju .El- Andaluz features the elite team of Yazid Fentazi,Karim Dellali, Frank Biddulphm hamid Bouri Anna Mudeka whom been considered as a brilliant singer of immense power will show her best at this event.

Lord Eric Sugumugu Acoustic Soul, the leader of the might Master Drummers of Africa will bring his new acoustic project to the UK for the first time. The Cameroonian bassist Sam Djengue Deep is one of the key musicians in African music in Europe .

And from Uganda Rachel Magoola will contribute in putting Ugandan music on the international map with her breathtaking mix African cross rhythms and deep funk grooves. And the Africa’s finest soul singer Hilary Mwelwa and her band Hil St Soul fuse R&B Soul, Western pop and African rhythms to create a unique sound that shines brightly in five studio albums.

Once again, we would like to congratulate this brave young saharawi singer for their efforts to "spread the word" about the just struggle for peace and justice in the Africa´s last colony: Western Sahara and the great role that are playing the saharawi women in this cause.

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

SAHARAWI MOTHER AND HER DAUGHTER VICTIMS OF A MURDER

The Saharawi Women very forceful condemn the murder of a saharawi woman and her daughter in saharawi occupied city of Dakhla, southern part of Western Sahara.
A Moroccan settler named Brahim Sayeh, who worked for the family of Hamma Menni as pastor, murdered Saturday morning the mother of the family, Salma mint Abdallah (80 years) and her daughter Demba Hamma, while they were asleep, reported a source of the Ministry of Occupied Territories and Saharawi Community Abroad.

The offender committed his crimes around 4 o’clock am, throwing a large stone on the head of the mother of the family who died on the scene before he went to her daughter, raped her and cut her throat stabbing her in the back and subsequently escaping, leaving behind the victims in a deplorable situation, the same source regretted.
The criminal took advantage of the absence of the son of the family moving to the locality of Toaulat, located 60 kilometres northeast of Dakhla, where his family used to go bring their needs, according to the same source.
The victims were discovered about 14 hours after the assassination, by a passers-by who was appalled by these "criminal" actions and hurried to the town to call for rescue, the source added.At least, nine Sahrawi citizens had died in similar circumstances, including three old people knocked by a Moroccan military who drove a truck in the streets of the occupied city of Dakhla, in December 2005.
The victims are: Laamor Sidi Brahim, Taleb Oul Ali Menna and Mohamed Lehsan Sidi Brahim. Since the outbreak of the intifada in May 2005, the Moroccan troops in Western Sahara and Southern Morocco also had committed other crimes after the death of Hamdi Lembarki under torture October 30, 2005 and Likhlifi Abba Cheikh, assassinated by a military near his home December 3, 2005.
In September 2007, young Saharawi Sidha Lehbib Ould Abdelaziz, died in a car that carried him to a psychiatrist at the centre of the city of Agadir (Southern Morocco), because of the "savage torture" that ‘he suffered during the journey, by the Moroccan forces of repression.The last victim was in December 2008 when two Sahrawi students: Houssein Abdessadik Alkteyif and Khaya Baba Abdelaziz died after being driven on by a Moroccan driving a bus at Agadir bus station, the same source recalled.

"TALK TOGETHER" CONDEMNS THE GREAT VIOLATIONS OF HUMAN RIGHTS IN THE OCCUPIED WESTERN SAHARA

Voices from all over the world are expressing their strongest condemnation to the continous repression against the peaceful people of Western Sahara in the occupied territories by morocco and also condemn the great violations of human rights in the occupied cities of the Africa´s last colony.
The British organisation, Talk Together, expressed deep concerns about the abduction and torture of two Saharawi young students, El Haouasi Nguia, a 19-year-old and Choummad Razouk, in a press release issued Sunday.The organisation, which runs programmes that bring together different sides of a conflict, to discuss their differences, said it is “deeply concerned by reports that a second member of its group of Layounne participants has been abducted and beaten by police”, reffering to the 20 years old student, Razouk Choummad, and El Haouasi Nguia, a 19-year-old young woman.Choummad, as it was well reported, was abducted by police on September 2, “blind folded, undressed, tortured for 5 hours, and covered in a liquid which he was told was petrol”.
The case of Choummad comes a week after his fellow participant, El Haouasi Nguia, a 19-year-old woman, was abducted, stripped, beaten and threatened with rape. She was also told by her Moroccan torturers “that the footage of the attack would be posted on the internet if she failed to renounce her political opinions and activities. Both students were reportedly quizzed about their planned attendance at the Talk Together programme”, Talk Together’s press release writes. The two young student were due to travel to the UK last month “to take part in the Talk Together conflict resolution course focussing on Western Sahara. A group of six young people from Layounne were prevented from boarding their plane at Agadir airport in Morocco, and subsequently detained and allegedly beaten by the authorities.
A second group of seven Moroccan students, plus their group leader, was also prevented from travelling from Casablanca”.“Talk Together is concerned for the well-being of both groups of young people and has sought advice from Amnesty International regarding their situation. Talk Together has written to the Moroccan authorities asking for clarification on the interventions which prevented the two groups from travelling to Oxford.
It is also requesting that the Layounne and Moroccan groups are reassured they will not be subjected to further attention from the authorities”, the press release further says.
Due to the absence of the Saharawi group from the occupied zones, and the Moroccan group because of the Moroccan authorities, only twenty two participants from the Saharawi refugee camps, and students from seven nationalities participated to a two week course about conflict resolution in Oxford.
These participants, Talk Together says “are now working on their projects to improve the situation”.

Saturday, September 5, 2009

SAHARAWI TEENAGER HAIR-RAISING´S TESTIMONY IN YOU TOUBE

The Saharawi Women´s Human Rights Department express their strongest condemnation to the great violations of human rights perpetrated by the moroccan authorities in the occupied cities of Western Sahara.
The young Saharawi student, Nguia El Houasi, appears in a video on You Tube, telling the story of her abduction and torture by Moroccan police last August 27.
The video is in Hassaniya Arabic, you can watch it below with an English translation of what she says:
My name is Nguia El HaouasiI was arrested several times, and the latest abduction was conducted on August 27th, 2009.
Last Thursday, I was on a visit to Hasanna Aliya, saharawi activist, who was tortured by Moroccan police in the city of Tantan. After I left the house along with my friends Hayat Rguibi and Sadani Aliya. After getting out of the house, a police car stopped nearby and was a Landrover model 110.T the officer on-board was Aziz Anouch and his colleague officer Khalid Barakat forced me into the car, and then drove me to the bank river of Sakia El Hamra near the middle school Allal ben abdalla. They handed me over to other police officers in plain clothes who joined us soon after my abduction. They blindfolded my eyes, and began to beat me brutally while using verbal abusive, cursing. Many other police agents joined the existing police gang namely agents belonging to DAG, DST Moroccan secret services. I did not see them, but I distinguished their voices and they asked my many questions such as: What are the dialogues that take place amongst the Saharawis on the return of the saharawi Ould Suelem From the refugee camps?I told him I was not in the city of Laayoune at this time. I was in the city of Agadir.Then they asked me: What do you think regarding this subject of defectors, such as Ould Suelem?I told them that the Polisario was very democratic, and they do not know any form of dictatorship, and that Polisario gives everyone the right to go wherever they like and not like you Moroccans who prevented us from travelling to Britain, and kept us at the airport in el Masira in Agadir. We were going to join the program Talk Together on behalf of the young Sahrawi generations in the occupied Territory, and you the Moroccans, you showed the world that you are dictators. You did not let us travel, and travelling is a human right. After I told them these Answers, they went mad..They said that the Saharawi human rights activists who incites us to engage in peaceful demonstrations, and they are the ones who support us and who give us national flags to raise during the demonstrations.I replied that nobody does incites us, and we do all this only for the defence of our cause and our right and we simply express our views and that it is spontaneous. Then they asked me about the peaceful demonstrations that I supposedly organized in the neighbourhood of Matallah district in Laayoune and who was in it. The officers beat me more in an attempt to make me tell them the names of persons involved. I told them that all the Saharawi people take part in the uprisings, and I do not know any one of them. There are young people, children and women and I was there to express my opinion and I had my flag Like all the Sahrawis. He told me now we will record a video, and we need you to say that it is the Sahrawi human rights activists who incite you to participate and organise these demonstrations and that they are just a group of separatists.After refusing to say these lies, I was asked to strip off my clothes and I refused. They took me down from the car and torn down my clothes leaving me naked in front of their ferocious eyes. All this was done while they were video-taping everything. They beat me in every part of my body. Under the psychological and physical torture and agreed to what I was asked to say.They only gave me my malhfa (Sahrawi women cloth), and blindfoldedme again and more torture followed.When they were filming me, there was a man who asked me all these questions while hiding his face, and they called him by his alias name so that I could not identify him, I am sure he was a VIP government servant. They say that they were filming me to show the world that they maintain security. They threatened me to publish it on the net and expose my body to all the world to scandalize me.I call upon international organizations to intervene to stop violations that occur daily in the occupied territories of Western Sahara, where the Moroccan authorities have also a former political prisoner Loumadi Abd Salam, Who was arrested just two days before me plus what they did to Hayat Rguibi and Hasanna Aliya just recently, and Naama Asfari. Morocco has violated human rights in many ways, where the Moroccan forces filmed sessions of Sahrawi citizens under torture and pressure. We do not bear all this and we are being watched in every place and our houses are besieged and controlled. We can not tolerate this situation anymore. The Minurso are there but they are doing nothing at all to help us. They do nothing to stop the ongoing violations of human rights, and we urge the United Nations to intervene to stop the torture exerted on our people. We need international monitoring and protection. The International community is doing nothing so far to stop this drama. We ask all civil societies in the world and all defenders of human rights to help us and to stop the mass violations committed by the Moroccan occupation forces towards the people of Western Sahara.

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

SAHARAWI WOMEN´S REPRENTATIVE IN AN IMPORTANT EVENT IN ITALY








At the request of an invitation of the Italian Committee of Solidarity with the Saharawi Peple in Sesto Fiorentino (Florence Provence), Zahra Ramdán, Member of the Executive Board of the National Union of Saharawi Women, has attended yesterday, September 1st, an important event that took place in the mentioned italian town in commemoration of the 25th anniversary of the signing of the Twin-City Agreement between the italian city of Sesto Fiorentino and the saharawi town of Mahbes.The event was chaired by the Vice-President of the Toscana Region, Mr. Federico Gelli, the President of the Province of Florence, Mr. Andrea Barducci, the Mair of Sesto Fiorentino, Mr. Gianni Gianassi, the Reprentative of the Saharawi People in the italian rerion of Toscana, Mr. Dan Hedi and other regional and local authorities.
The Mair of Sesto Fiorentino and the Saharawi Women´s Representative have inaugurated a commerative plaque in occassion of this historical event. The Mair has said among other things: "We have adopted this inniciative of hanging this commerative plaque in the entrance of our institution for expressing our total solidarity and friendship with the saharawi people and for reaffirming our conviction in our principles of respect of human rights and freedom and justice".

When the Saharawi Women´s Reprentative took the floor, she said: "On behalf of the Saharawi People I would like to express our deepest thanks for the continous support to the just struggle of the people of Western Sahara and the great actions of solidarity and friendship made by the Municipality and the people of Sesto Fiorentino with my people whom never can forget the support and solidarity from the beginning of the struggle for self-determination and independence. We express our deep gratitude and reaffirm to you our strong determination in continuing struggling for the respect of our legitimate rights for freedom and independence".
Mrs. Ramdan also said that the saharawi women play an important role in the struggle of the saharawi people for selfdetermination, for the right to decide on the future of their home country. Women played a vital role in the saharawi refugee camps and also in the occupied zones of Western Sahara. They have broken with the western stereotypes about the arab and muslim women. Sahara Women are really an example of emancipation and the struggle for equal rights between women and men. With this symbolic event we reaffirm to the world that they must support the struggle of the saharawi people for peace and justice.





Saturday, August 29, 2009

WE CONDEMN THE GREAT VIOLATIONS OF HUMAN RIGHTS IN THE OCCUPIED CITIES OF WESTERN SAHARA

The Saharawi Women want to express their fourceful condemnation to the continous violations of human rights perpetrated by the moroccan army in the occupied cities of Western Sahra. The moroccan police abducts torture and leave a sahrawi minor naked in the outskirts of the occupied city of El Aaiun. This young saharawi girl is Enguía El Hawassi.
Sources from the occupied capital of Western Sahara, El Aaiun, indicated to UPES that the Moroccan police abducted, tortured and left the Saharawi girl, Nguia El Haouassi, in the outskirts of the city.The 19 years old girl, it should be recalled was one of the six Saharawi students who were supposed to participate to a students encounter organised last August 5 to 18 by the British organisation Talk Together in Oxford.
The young girl told human rights defenders that she was stopped by Moroccan police, headed by the famous Moroccan torturer, Aziz Anouch, around 9 o’clock in the evening, while she was walking in the street in Matallah especially that in the nights of Ramadan citizens stay late in the streets.The policemen forced her in their car and blindfolded her.
They drove her to an unknown place outside the city, naked her and started beating her and insulting her, threatening her of rape if she doesn’t cooperate.According to her testimony, her torturers were asking about the reasons behind her attention to participate to the Oxford youth encounter organised by Talk Together, her relation with Saharawi human rights activists and her political opinion about the Moroccan occupation and the independence of Western Sahara.She also confirmed that all the interrogatory was filmed, and that an officer told her that he will make sure that the film is put on the internet, and that next time he will himself make sure to kill her with his own hands if she doesn’t give up her political opinions and her activities as a student in secondary schools against the Moroccan occupation.
After five hours torture, the torturers left Nguia alone in the dark at about 2 o’clock in the morning, completely naked. She had to walk and fortunately found a Saharawi family to help her and take her to El Aaiun to her family house.
It should be recalled that this is not the first time Nguia is arrested and tortured, she had many bad experiences with the Moroccan police since she was 14, but she had always refused to submit to the colonisers will, and is always heading demonstrations and confrontations with the Moroccan authorities in the occupied city of El Aaiun.
Last August, Nguia El Haouassi was prevented along with five other Saharawi youth from travelling to Oxford, London, where they were expected to participate to a youth debate about the conflict in Western Sahara.The six Saharawi students were then arrested, beaten and forcibly deported in police cars from the airport of Agadir to El Aaiun.
Amnesty International registered the case then, but no further action was undertaken by international organisations to protect these young students who had been threatened and intimidated by the Moroccan police, who will certainly take revenge of them later, Saharawi human rights defenders estimate.

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

THE INTERNATIONAL CIVIL COURAGE PRIZE FOR AMINETOU HAIDAR

The Saharawi Women would like to express to Mrs. Haidar their deepest congratulations for the prize that an american organization is going to award her in recognition of her peaceful struggle for peace and justice in the Africa´s last colony: Western Sahara.
Former Saharawi political prisoner and human rights defender, Aminatou Haidar, will be rewarded a 2009 Civil Courage Prize, as the champion of non-violent resistance in Western Sahara, in an Award Ceremony that will be held in New York City on October 20, 2009, Train Foundation announced Monday.
According to a statement released by the Organization, Ms. Haidar is a courageous campaigner for self-determination of Western Sahara, as well as against forced "disappearances" and abuses of prisoners of conscience.
Regularly referred to as the "Saharawi Gandhi," Ms. Haidar is one of Western Sahara’s most prominent human rights defenders.Her peaceful efforts have been met with increased police aggression and brutality. In 1987, at the age of 21, Ms. Haidar was one of 700 peaceful protestors arrested for participating in a rally in support of a referendum. Later she was "disappeared" without charge or trial and held in secret detention centres for four years, where she and 17 other Saharawi women were tortured.
In 2005, the Moroccan police detained and beaten her after another peaceful demonstration. She was released after 7 months, thanks to international pressure form groups like Amnesty International and European Parliament.Since then, Ms. Haidar has travelled the globe to expose the Moroccan military’s heavy-handed approach and to plead for the Saharawi People’s right to self-determination.
Her efforts helped change the Moroccan government’s violent tactics for dispersing pro-independence demonstrations. Unfortunately, the torture and harassment of Saharawi human rights defenders continues.Ms. Haidar was born in 1967 in El Aaiun, Western Sahara. She is the mother of two children and holds a baccalaureate in Modern Literature.
She has been awarded the 2008 Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Award, the 2007 Silver Rose Award (Austria), and the 2006 Juan Maria Bandres Human Rights Award (Spain). She was nominated by the European Parliament to the Andrei Sakarov Human Rights Award. Amnesty International (USA Branch) nominated her for the Ginetta Sagan Fund Award. She was also nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize, the statement added.
The international Civil Courage Prize, has been sponsored, Since 2000, by the Train Foundation (formerly the Northcote Parkinson Fund), established by the Hon. John Train in 1987, honours extraordinary individuals whose acts, undertaken deliberately, over time, have demonstrated "steadfast resistance to evil at great personal risk." The Train Foundation will continue this initiative in cooperation with like-minded organizations world-wide.

Thursday, August 20, 2009

SOULTANA KHEYA RETURNS TO HER HOMELAND

The saharawi Women would like to express their great happiness for the young saharawi human rights activist´s return, Soultana Kheya, to her homeland after two long year of medical treatment overseas.
Yesterday, tuesday, August 18th, took and airplane and landed in the occupied El Aaiún´s Airport where she was received as a hero by great number of colleagues, friends and family.
Soultana Kheya is considered an example of brave woman because because since her chidhood she was always struggling for justice and peace for the saharawi people.
She was seriously injuried in a peaceful demonstration organized by the saharawi university student in the moroccan city of Marrakech and where the moroccan army brutally repressed the demonstration and Soultana Kheya lost her right-eye.
Althought that the moroccan authorities tried to block the entrance to some saharawis in the Aaiún´s Airport, a lot of saharawi women and gentlemen received her at the terminal and she put her saharawi national flag in her neck as always she does.
The moroccan soldiers continued to controlled all their movements and sorrounded the Bugaga´s family´s house in El-Aaiún´s downtown, where a great number of saharawi human rights activists organized a great popular welcoming to these heroic daughter of the saharawi people who sacrificed her life for the freedom and justice of her people.

Saturday, August 15, 2009

SAHARAWI WOMEN´S REPRESENTATIVE VISITS AUSTRALIA

Fatma Mahfoud, known also as Fatimel-lu, whom is Member of the International Relations Commission of the our women´s organizationa: National Union of Saharawi Women, visited Australia, August, to tell the story of the Western Sahara conflict from a Saharawi woman’s point of view.
During her visit to Melbourne Fatma met with members of the Victorian Parliamentary Amnesty Group, with members of the Upper House of Victorian State Parliament, with councillors from the municipality of the Yarra and with a group of NGOs based in Melbourne. She also participated in a public meeting and a screening of a documentary held at Kino Cinema.
During her visit to Sydney Fatima Mahfoudh participated along with the Saharawi representative to Australia in a seminar held at Macquarie University on Western Sahara. The seminar was attended by many students and lecturers of the university.The Saharawi women representative spoke during a round table organised at Toxteth in Sydney on Western Sahara. Among other speakers during the meeting were the former President of NSW Legislative Council, Dr. Meredith Burgmann and the Polisario Representative to Australia.


In her speech during the meeting Fatima Mahfoud explained that Saharawi women are respected and acknowledged as playing significant leadership roles in Saharawi society. In particular they are crucial to the effective functioning of the refugee camps.


There are women ministers and many women in senior positions within the structures of the government who have power and authority. She also under that literacy rates in the Saharawi refugee camps are amongst the highest in Africa.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

THE SAHARAWI WOMEN HAVE A LOT OF HOPE IN THE RECENT PEACE-TALKS

The Saharawi Women and the great majority of the people of Western Sahara have a lot of hope in the very Peace-Talks that has taken place in the Austrian city of Duernstein between the two belligerant in the conflict of the last colony in the african continent: Morocco and POLISARO Front (liberation movement recognized all over the world as thesole representative of the people of Western Sahara).
Polisario Front and Morocco have agreed to the publication of statement, read to the press by Christopher Ross concluding the meeting between the two parties in the Austrian town of Duernstein, on August 10 and 11, that the Polisario Front and Morocco have renewed their determination to continue negotiations as soon as possible.The discussions took place only between the delegations of Polisario Front and Morocco and covered the assessment of rounds of negotiations in Manhasset, how to implement resolution 1871 of the Security Council and confidence measures, which are fundamental issue of human rights.
These discussions took place in "an atmosphere of sincere commitment, openness and mutual respect", according to the statement.
Both parties in conflict, the Polisario Front and Morocco reiterated their determination to continue negotiations as soon as possible, and the personal Envoy will fix the date and venue of the next meeting in consultation with the parties, the same source added.
Delegations of neighbouring countries, Algeria and Mauritania, were also present at the opening and closing sessions and were consulted separately during the talks.
Following these meetings, the United Nations Secretary General Personal Envoy, Mr. Christopher Ross and delegations would like to thank the Government of the Republic of Austria for its generous hospitality.
The british newspaper "The Guardian" has just published a very interesting article written by the Saharawi Leader, Emhamed Khaddad. Under the tittle of "We seek no revenge – only Peace" the also Saharawi Coordinator with MINURSO says in his article:
The people of Western Sahara stand prepared to engage with Morocco and to enter open discussions about our joint future.A new round of talks between the kingdom of Morocco and the Polisario Front of Western Sahara are under way in Vienna, Austria. These talks, characterised as informal by the personal envoy of the UN secretary general, Christopher Ross, are the latest attempt to bring peace and security to Western Sahara and to the wider Maghreb region.
We enter them with an unwavering and genuine commitment to finding a just, mutually acceptable and democratic solution. Will our Moroccan counterparts adopt the same approach?In every circumstance, peace comes at a cost. Somehow, somewhere, there must be a compromise and someone, generally everyone, must be prepared to search for common ground and to yield to the higher ideals found there. For the people of Western Sahara, the price of peace is high. We have been occupied for over three decades, following an illegal annexation by the Moroccan kingdom. We have seen our natural resources become unethical trade boons to the Moroccan economy while our people languish in refugee camps, unable, or too afraid, to return home.Yet, rather than seek to exercise a sense of revenge or frustration, we stand prepared to engage with Morocco and to enter open discussions about our joint future. This is long-established policy. In our statement to the UN security council in 2007, we stated we would guarantee "the rights and obligations of the Moroccan population in Western Sahara". We also put on the public record that our readiness "to participate with Morocco and the countries of the region in the maintenance of peace, stability and security for the whole region.
"The people of Western Sahara remain committed to the self-determination process initiated by the UN nearly 50 years ago, and have backed ever since via various resolutions and statements. For instance, we recall the security council resolved in 2002 to express "its readiness to consider any approach which provides for self-determination". It is not clear how or where Morocco’s proposal for autonomy within the Moroccan state fits in with this basic agenda.
A unilateral solution to a three-decade-long conflict, as is proposed by Morocco, is not only farcical, it is an option the community of democratic nations cannot countenance.The people of Western Sahara have been clear that we are willing to work with the Moroccan monarchy and will act without recrimination in relation to Moroccans now living in Western Sahara. We are aware we do not choose our neighbours and so we are destined to share a border. This is a form of realpolitik that makes sense at all levels. We do not seek any victories over Morocco, we only seek parity. We aim to co-operate in economic and security matters, as any decent neighbour would be expected to do.For Morocco, the benefits of good relations with a free and democratic Western Sahara are immense.
The massive costs of its military occupation have been estimated at 3% of Morocco’s GDP. Analysts suggest the military costs in keeping some 150,000 troops in the occupied territories alone is over $153bn (£92.3bn) since 1975, or around $12m (£7.2m) for every day it has occupied Western Sahara. As a result of this extraordinary outlay, Morocco has the world’s fifth highest proportional spend on its military. Moreover, the long-touted Maghreb union, which has faltered for decades on the back of the Western Saharan dispute, would at last be free of this considerable obstacle to better relations.
Quite apart from the damaging moral position Morocco maintains in Western Sahara, ending this money drain must surely be a priority for Rabat and its often impoverished people, as must the prospect of awakening the sleeping giant of North African economic unity. The UN’s way is the only way forward. A referendum on self-determination, a fundamental mechanism for all UN-mandated colonies – as Western Sahara is – is the only viable means of engendering anything like a sustainable common ground. The future of the Sahrawi people must be in their own hands, not in any institution and it is certainly not the right of an invading power, maintaining an illegal and unjust regime.
As we enter these talks we favour the open-palm approach of US president Barack Obama. We are willing to pay the price of peace as an investment in our future. That is our stated agenda going into the Vienna talks. The people of Western Sahara deserve nothing less from us, for it is peace and freedom we crave most of all.

INTERESTING CONFERENCE VIA SATELITE ON THE ROOTS OF THE WESTERN SAHARA CONFLICT

Via an Internet connection from California, US, Dr. Sidi Mohamed Omar, Sahrawi researcher and specialist in peace studies and conflict resolution, presented today a paper at the conflict resolution course organised by the UK-based organisation, Talk Together, in Oxford. Students from different countries participated in the session.
Entitled “Mapping of the Conflict in Western Sahara”, the paper presents a roadmap of the conflict in Western Sahara by analysing its history and context, primary parties, core issues and the positions and interests of the parties involved as well as the conflict dynamics.
In determining the nature of the conflict, Dr. Sidi Mohamed made it clear that the “conflict in Western Sahara is not a societal, communal, ethnic, religious or class conflict. Rather, it is an international conflict of a political nature, and a decolonisation issue that has been on the list of the United Nations since the 60s”.
In his analysis of the root causes of the conflict, Dr. Sidi Mohamed underlined that the direct, structural cause that underlies the ongoing conflict in Western Sahara between the Kingdom of Morocco and the Frente POLISARIO, the sole and legitimate representative of the Sahrawi people, is Morocco’s military invasion and annexation of the territory in 1975.
The origins of this action, however, lie in the expansionist ideology of the “Greater Morocco” and the subsequent territorial claims that the Moroccan regime has laid on its neighbours. In conclusion, Dr. Sidi Mohamed made it very clear that a peaceful, just and lasting solution to the conflict in Western Sahara necessarily entails the exercise by the Sahrawi people of their internationally recognised right to self-determination through a negotiated, democratic and free process in keeping with international law and practice.
“In this process, they could decide their political future, either to be independent, integrate into Morocco or settle for another arrangement. In any case, the final word should be theirs”, he added. He also argued that the success of the UN-led negotiation process would depend not only on achieving a mutually acceptable solution in line with international legality, but also on the ability of the two parties to think seriously about their relations in the post-conflict context.
This process of cooperative thinking will imply, among other things, determining the mutual guarantees in all vital areas, which each party will be willing to grant to the other with a view to achieving not only a win-win solution, but also one that will address the core issues around which the conflict has developed. “The proposal presented by the Frente POLISARIO to the UN in April 2007 contains key elements to be considered in this regard”, concluded Dr. Sidi Mohamed. Despite significant resistance, an innovative conflict resolution course has launched in Oxford last Thursday 6. Students from nine different countries embarked on the intensive immersion course, without two groups of students who were prevented from travelling from Morocco on Wednesday. Students from the disputed territory of Western Sahara were stopped at Agadir airport in Morocco on Wednesday. They stayed there to protest at the block on their journey and embarked on a hunger strike. On Thursday around 18.00 local time they were forcibly removed from the airport and transported in a convoy of police cars, passing through to Gulmin 200km south at 20:30, and on to El Aaiun where they were taken to a police station, interrogated and intimidated.
Their mobile phones had previously been removed, and they were questioned about their contacts and messages. They were also asked about their involvement in Talk Together, and motivation for taking part.The students chose to go to the family home of Rabab Amidane, winner of Norway Students’ Peace Prize earlier this year.
Their supporters met them with slogans, to which the police objected. The latest information is that the students are in the house, which is surrounded by police. Another group of students, from Morocco itself, has also been unable to travel. According to the Moroccan embassy in London, the group of seven students suddenly all developed “family problems” immediately prior to boarding the flight, which prevented them from travelling to Oxford.

Sunday, August 9, 2009

AMNESTY INTENTIONAL CONDEMNS THE MOROCCAN ATTITUDE AGAINST SIX YOUNG SAHARAWIS

Amnesty International issued a press release about the six young Saharawis recently prevented from travelling to London, assaulted by police and forcibly removed in cars to the occupied capital of Western Sahara, El Aaiun.Campaigners supporting the six Saharawi youn women and men chose to name them "the Oxford-Six", and are willing to continue putting pressures on Morocco to allow them to participate to a youth dialogue organsied by UK organisation, Talk Together, that will tackle the problem of Western Sahara in London.Here is the complete text of Amnesty International’s press release:
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL PUBLIC STATEMENT
Date: 7 August 2009 Morocco/ Western Sahara:
Sahrawis prevented from travelling and punished for their stance Amnesty International is concerned by reports that Moroccan security officials forcibly removed six young Sahrawis from Agadir’s Al Massira airport on 6 August 2009 and then assaulted them, after refusing them permission to travel to the United Kingdom (UK) on 5 August.
The organization is calling on the authorities to launch an immediate investigation into the beatings and forced removal of the six, who include three young women, and to explain why they were refused permission to travel to the UK to participate in a programme intended to foster reconciliation between young people from different backgrounds.
The six are reported to have been assaulted by officials at three different locations - outside Agadir’s Al Massira airport, at a border police station near Laayoune, and again at the Laayoune home of one of the six. Amnesty International wrote to Interior Minister Chakib Benmoussa on 6 August to express concern that the six Sahrawis from Western Sahara and another group of young people from Morocco had both been prevented from travelling for what appear to be politically-motivated reasons.
In its letter, Amnesty International drew attention to Morocco’s obligation, under Article 12 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), to respect the right of individuals to leave a country, including their own, and called on the government to lift the ban and allow the two groups to travel to the UK immediately and without further impediment.
The six Sahrawis - named as Mimouna Amidan, Mohamed Da’noun, Nguia ElHaouasi, Mohamed Fadel El’asri, Choummad Razouk and Hayat Rguibi, whose ages range between 17 and 24 years - are reported to have been forcibly removed from Al Massira airport shortly after 5 pm on 6 August. They were scheduled to travel to London on 5 August to take part in the Youths Talk Together about Western Sahara, a programme organized by Talk Together, a UK-based non-profit initiative. The programme aimed to bring together young people from Morocco and Western Sahara, the Tindouf camps in Algeria, Norway and the UK for a period of two weeks (5-19 August 2009) to discuss issues affecting their daily lives and political concerns. The six young Sahrawis were scheduled to take Royal Air Maroc flight AT422 from Agadir to Casablanca at 11:30 am on 5 August in order to travel on to London later that afternoon. However, when they arrived at the departures hall of Agadir Al Massira airport, they were informed by plain-clothed security officials that they were not permitted to travel.
The moroccan officials did not disclose the reason or legal basis for this prohibition, stating simply that they were acting "under instructions from above", but castigated the students as "separatists and members of the Polisario". The six students were all in possession of valid travel documents and visas for the UK. The six Sahrawis remained at the airport and went on hunger strike to protest the authorities’ action but after about 30 hours were forcibly removed by a combined force of security officials said to have included members of the police, the Royal Gendarmerie and the Auxiliary Forces. After being escorted from the airport, the students were beaten, had their belongings including their mobile phones temporarily confiscated, and were forced into a vehicle and driven to Laayoune, about 350 kilometres south of Agadir.
The vehicle was reportedly accompanied by cars containing members of the Moroccan Royale Gendarmerie. On the way, the six were taken to a border police station and questioned, including about the Youths Talk Together about Western Sahara programme and their contacts with international organizations, and are said to have been beaten and insulted. They were then beaten again by security officials when they arrived at the home of Mimouna Amidan at about 3:30 am on 7 August, where they were greeted by family members who carried flags of the Polisario Front and chanted slogans in favour of the independence of Western Sahara. Some of their relatives are also reported to have been assaulted. Mohamed Fadel El’asri and others sustained minor injuries as a result and security officials are now reported to be staking out the home of Mimouna Amidan. Background Seven young Moroccans and their group leader, who were due to attend the same programme in the UK, were prevented by Moroccan security authorities from taking the August 5 Air Arabia flight 3O491 from Casablanca to Stansted, UK, also without being informed of the reason or legal grounds for the authorities’ action.Amnesty International is concerned that the Moroccan authorities’ refusal to allow these two groups of young people from travelling abroad to take part in the Youths Talk Together about Western Sahara programme is part of a wider pattern of curbs imposed by the Moroccan authorities on the legitimate exercise of freedom of expression concerning issues that they deem politically-sensitive, such as the role and status of the monarchy, national security and the status of Western Sahara. Human rights defenders, journalists, lawyers and others continue to face intimidation and even prosecution when they transcend certain "red lines", which include expressing views in favour of the independence of Western Sahara.
On numerous occasions, Amnesty International has called on the Moroccan authorities to uphold their obligations under Article 9 of the Moroccan Constitution and Article 19 of ICCPR, which guarantee the right to freedom of expression. Working to protect human rights worldwide

Thursday, August 6, 2009

BRITISH NGO´S WORRIED ABOUT THE FATE OF SIX YOUNG SAHARAWIS WHOM WERE GOING TO TRAVEL TO LONDON FOR ATTENDING AN EVENT

The Saharawi Women would like to express their solidarity with the six young saharawis whom were invited by British institutions to attend an importent event in the british capital and condemn the action taken by the moroccan police agains these six young saharawis.
Western Sahara Campaign UK and Free Western Sahara network jointly issued a press release to express concern about the Moroccan authorities prevention of six Saharawi young people from boarding their flight to London, where they were to participate to a peaceful dialogue on the conflict of Western Sahara.

Here is the press release: 6/8/09 Western Saharan hunger-strike students “risk everything” to get to Oxford Campaigners today expressed concern about the fate of six Saharawi students who were due to fly to London yesterday, August 4th, but were prevented from boarding their plane by Moroccan police.

The students from the disputed territory of Western Sahara were enroute to England as part of an EU / British Council sponsored initiative to increase understanding between Moroccans and Western Saharans but were marched off the plane and across the runway at Agadir airport.

The students have been given no reason for being detained and have gone on hunger-strike in the airport terminal in protest despite growing fears for their safety.

The students aged between 17 and 24 are from occupied Western Sahara and were travelling together with students from Morocco where they were all due to attend a two week residential course in Oxford exploring ways of resolving a conflict that has gone on for over 34 years.

The Moroccan students pulled out from travelling to England yesterday, all of them citing family problems for their sudden withdrawal.

The course run by the British-based organisation, Talk Together, aims to take young people from either side of an ongoing conflict and challenge them to generate new ways forward. Organiser Andrew Brown said today:“It would be a huge disappointment if participants were to be blocked from attending a project that aims to confront prejudice, foster understanding, and find new solutions”. As well as being a disappointment for all those involved in the two years of organising the project the situation also represents a genuine danger for the students.

Last year reports by Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International expressed concerns about human rights violations by the Moroccan state against Saharawis who take part in non-violent protests.

These have regularly been violently broken up by Moroccan forces and numerous people have been arrested, tortured or ‘disappeared’.

One of the hunger-strikers, Amaidane Maimouna, 17, understands the risk they are taking but says that they are determined to continue with their protest for as long as it takes. “Either we will go to the UK or we will go to hospital” she says, “There is no third way”.

Jeremy Corbyn MP, Chair of the All Party Parliamentary Group on Western Sahara said:“With representatives of Morocco and the Polisario Front meeting next week in Vienna to discuss the resumption of negotiations it would be a cruel irony if these young people from both sides of this terrible conflict were to miss out on an opportunity to share ideas and develop greater understanding.”

A FAMOUS BRITISH HUMAN RIGHTS ACTIVIST WRITTES ON THE STRUGGLE OF SAHARAWI PEOPLE

The saharawi women would like to express their deepest thanks to our dear friend Stefan Simanowitz for his continous actions of solidarity with our people and we congrratulate him for his article that was published by several british media. Under the tittle of: "Sahara: Film Screenings in the Devil´s Garden" the author says:
Nineteen-year-old Ibrahim Hussein Leibeit shifts his weight in obvious discomfort. The stump of his leg, blown off below the knee by a landmine on 10 April, just three weeks ago, is yet to heal. ‘The pain is horrible,’ he tells me. ‘But today it is possible for me to think about other things.’ Leibeit is a refugee. He was born and raised in the isolated camps in south western Algeria, where an estimated 165,000 Saharawi people who fled their native Western Sahara have lived for over three decades. Western Sahara, ‘Africa’s last colony’, was divided between Morocco and Mauritania by the Spanish when they withdrew in 1976 following the mass mobilization by the Moroccans known as ‘the Green March’. The preceding year the International Court of Justice had rejected Moroccan and Mauritanian claims to sovereignty over the territory, effectively recognizing the Saharawis’ right to independence.


In February 1976, the Saharawi independence movement, the Polisario Front, declared the creation of the Saharawi Arab Democratic Republic. A 16-year war ensued between the Moroccans and the Polisario Front, the Mauritanians having withdrawn in 1979. In 1991, the fighting came to end and under the terms of a 1991 UN ceasefire agreement, a referendum for self-determination was promised. However, this has been continually blocked by Morocco, leaving the Saharawi to live in four large camps in the inhospitable Algerian desert.


The remotest of camps Home to nearly 30,000 refugees, Dakhla, named after the beautiful coastal city in Western Sahara, is the most remote of the camps, located 175 kilometers away from the nearest city, Tindouf. It has no paved roads and is entirely dependent on outside supplies of food and water. In the summer months, temperatures on the hammada desert plain regularly top 120 degrees. With sandstorms, little vegetation and no sources of food or water, it is little wonder that the area is known locally as ‘The Devil’s Garden’. And yet, incredibly, for a week each May, this desolate refugee camp plays host to the Sahara International Film Festival, a gala of screenings, workshops and concerts attended by an array of internationally acclaimed actors and film-makers.


Now in its sixth year, the festival was set up by award-winning Peruvian documentary film-maker, Javier Corcuera, and aims to both entertain and educate the refugees as well as raising awareness internationally of the plight of the Saharawi people. There are over 500 international participants in attendance, mainly Spaniards, who flew into Tindouf in two charter planes and travelled to the sprawling ochre-coloured camp in a convoy of vehicles. Dakhla itself is clean and well organized, with wide sandy streets lined with houses and tents forming neat family compounds. The festival site is in a spacious area in the centre of the camp and includes a multiplex-sized outdoor screen attached to the side of an articulated lorry.


The central screen is surrounded by tents for workshops, exhibitions and indoor screenings as well as numerous stalls. The programme includes over 40 films from around the world. The themes mainly explore diverse experiences of struggle and hope, but there is some lighter entertainment and even an animated film which holds enraptured the capacity crowd of refugee children. Audiovisual workshops run by the London-based charity Sandblast, provide Saharawi refugees with an opportunity to learn about all aspects of film-making as well as create their own video messages, which are put online and can be seen by their extended families in Western Sahara, from whom they have been separated for over 33 years. The festival is gaining renown, helped by the support of luminaries such as Penelope Cruz and Pedro Almodovar.


This year a number of well-known people from the entertainment industry were there, including actors Helena Anaya (Sex and Lucia), Eduardo Noriega (Vantage Point) and Oscar-nominated film director, Javier Fesser. Rumours, however, that Benicio del Toro and football legend Diego Maradona might turn up, prove to be untrue. ‘We are mainly B and C-listers,’ Noriega laughs. ‘Last year we had a proper A-lister in Javier Bardem.’ Bardem’s visit helped the festival garner publicity, which ensured that the festival even secured a half-page spread in OK! magazine and helped campaigners in Spain to gather 250,000 signatories (to date) petitioning the Spanish Government to act to support the Saharawris’ demand for self-determination.Real change The celebrities, like all visitors to the festival, stay with Saharawi families, sharing their homes and their food. Living alongside the refugees gives visitors an indelible insight into the conditions under which the refugees live and motivates many participants to get involved in the campaign to lobby their respective governments to put political pressure on the Morocco over the situation in Western Sahara. The campaign in Spain is growing steadily, boosted by a sense of betrayal felt towards Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero’s new socialist government, which failed to reverse the long-held Spanish policy toward Morocco. However, campaigners recognize that to affect real change the focus of attention cannot just be on the Spanish Government. With Morocco recently named by the US as a major non-NATO ally, and with many Western governments and companies involved in lucrative trade deals with the Moroccans, action has not been high on the international political agenda. Large reserves of phosphate, vast fishing grounds and potential offshore reserves of oil and gas mean that the Western Sahara is not a possession that the Moroccans will relinquish lightly.Privately, a Polisario representative admits concern about the rising level of militancy among some young Saharawis. After waiting with patient rage while countless UN resolutions have been passed and ignored, many are losing faith in the diplomatic process. Indeed, Ibrahim Hussein Leibeit is one such young man. He had been taking part in a march to the 1553 mile-long fortified barrier known as ‘the wall’ built by the Moroccans to stop the Saharawis from returning to their land.


In a symbolic gesture, Ibrahim was attempting to get close enough to the wall to throw a pebble to the other side when he trod on the landmine. He is rapidly becoming something of a hero to the Saharawi cause, a symbol of their defiance. Ibrahim has no regrets. ‘I would gladly lose my other leg if it would mean my country could be free,’ he says with earnest.Emotionally charged At a dusty red carpet ceremony on the final day, the decision of the popular jury is announced and the White Camel award for best picture is picked up by producer Albert Noriega for the 2008 Steven Soderbergh film, Che, Guerilla.


The atmosphere is emotionally charged as participants and organizers, some waving flags of the Saharawi nation, take to the stage in a final act of solidarity with the refugees. After the obligatory photo-calls, the international participants board the waiting fleet of Landcruisers in buoyant mood. But as our convoy heads back across the expanse of empty desert the mood starts to change and thoughts turn to those we have left behind. The further we drive, the more apparent it becomes just how isolated and abandoned the refugees are. During the 16-year war, captured Moroccan prisoners would not be held behind walls or barbed-wire fences. Instead they would be corralled into open compounds in the desert.


Prisoners were free to leave at anytime. But in the Sahara there is nowhere to go. Although conditions in the refugee camps are by no means wretched, with all basic needs taken care of by international aid agencies, Dakhla is essentially a desert prison. Despite a tangible undercurrent of anger and frustration, the camp has not become a slough of despond. Indeed, Y. Lamine Baali, Polisario’s UK representative, tells me that what fuels Saharawri determination to carry on is a strong sense of injustice. A word I hear a lot in Dakhla is ‘karama’. I ask Baali what it means. It is an Arabic word for strength and dignity, he explains. ‘Karama is the essence of our existence,’ he tells me. ‘The illegal occupation of our homeland is a terrible affront to our karama. When you hurt people in this way you threaten their whole existence.’Postscript: Return to action I touch down in London, dusty and somewhat dazed, but with a rare clarity of purpose.


The next day at work I take my boss aside and hand her my letter of resignation. Whilst staying in refugee camp in Dakhla, I realized that the lack of international awareness of the Saharawis’ struggle makes their desperate situation feel even more hopeless than it already is. And so I have resolved to give up my day job and work with the Free Western Sahara Campaign to help move the story of the Saharawi refugees off the culture pages of a few magazines reporting on the film festival and on to the international pages of all newspapers, where it belongs.


Next year, it is hoped that there will be direct flights to Tindouf from London, Paris and LA filled with actors, film-makers and musicians as well as ordinary people wanting to be part of the festival and show their solidarity with the Saharawi.


In this way the festival will become even more of an international event, putting pressure on political decision-makers at the highest level and reminding the world of an otherwise forgotten conflict.


Stefan Simanowitz is a journalist, broadcaster and human rights campaigner.


If you would like to help the Saharawi people or get involved in next year’s film festival visit www.freesahara.ning.com or email freesaharacampaign@gmail.com


The campaign has been officially launched in the Houses of Parliament at midday on 12 June, and had been preceded by a delegation to No.10 Downing Street.


This article was previously published in The New Internationalist.

Thursday, July 30, 2009

OBAMA´S ADMINISTRATION DIFFERENT POLICY IN THE WESTERN SAHARA CONFLICT´S SOLUTION

The Saharawi Women and the whole people of Western Sahara have a lot of hope in the President Obama´s Administration to impose a just, democratic and lasting solution to the problem of decolonization of Western Sahara according to the United Nations resolutions.
President Obama’s nominee to be U.S. ambassador to Morocco seemed to confirm a U.S. policy shift on the Western Sahara in testimony to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
In addition, Samuel Kaplan said Morocco faces a growing threat from the Al Qaida Organization in the Islamic Maghreb.Kaplan, a career attorney and businessman said Al Qaida Islamic Maggreb has managed to recruit operatives from the slums of Moroccan cities, despite increased counter-insurgency cooperation.
"While the Moroccan government has been successful in finding, arresting and prosecuting terrorist cells over the years, the specter of transnational terrorism has grown significantly in the region," Kaplan said.Kaplan said the key impediment to Moroccan cooperation with its neighbors has been the dispute over Western Sahara.
In his nomination hearing, Kaplan did not cite Morocco’s autonomy plan for Western Sahara or support by Congress and the former Bush administration.
Diplomatic sources said President Barack Obama has withdrawn U.S. support for Morocco’s autonomy plan. The sources said Obama has not ruled out a United Nations-arranged effort that would grant the Algerian-backed Polisario control over the entire region.
"One of the major impediments to improved cooperation among North African countries has been the issue of Western Sahara," Kaplan said. "If I am confirmed as ambassador to Morocco, I will fully support the efforts of the UN secretary-general’s personal envoy to work with Morocco and other parties in the region toward a just, lasting and mutually-acceptable political solution."In testimony to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Kaplan, a career attorney and businessman, reviewed the U.S. assessment of the security situation in Morocco.
He said the North African kingdom must reduce AQIM’s capability by accelerating development, democracy and regional cooperation."If confirmed, I will continue our efforts to promote partnership, expand U.S. exports, promote human rights, counter extremism, reinforce military cooperation and peacekeeping, and of course, to protect Americans living abroad," Kaplan said on July 22.In 2008, the United States launched a project to supply Morocco, deemed a major non-NATO ally, with 24 F-16 Block 52+ multi-role fighters. Morocco has been the first North African to order the advanced F-16.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

AMERICANS SEND A LETTER TO PRESIDENT OBAMA ON THE SITUATION IN WESTERN SAHARA


The Saharawi women would like to express their deepest thanks to this distinguished friends of the people of Western Sahara for their great inniciative for sending a letter to their President, Mr. Obama.

A diverse group of concerned American citizens and non-governmental organizations including Seoul Peace Prize Laureate Suzanne Scholte, Robert F. Kennedy Center Director Monika Kalra Varma, Former Reagan Ambassador Frank Ruddy, and Professor Stephen Zunes of the University of San Francisco sent a letter today to President Barack Obama urging him to resolve the long-standing conflict over Western Sahara by supporting a referendum on self-determination and protecting the Sahrawis from the violence perpetrated against them by the Moroccan authorities in the occupied territory.
"As Africa’s only remaining colony, the fate of Western Sahara has been uncertain since Morocco began its occupation over 30 years ago," stated the letter. "In light of the historic friendship between the governments of the United States and the Kingdom of Morocco, as President of the United States, you have the ability to help resolve this long-standing conflict and ensure that the Sahrawi people’s human rights, including the inalienable right to self-determination, are protected.

" The letter included Americans who had served with MINURSO and seen the conflict first-hand including attorney Katlyn Thomas and Mara Hanna, and Christian leaders supportive of the Sahrawi cause including Janet Lenz of Christ the Rock Church, Cheryl Banda of Not Forgotten International and Pastor Dan Stanley of RockFish Church as well as a diverse group of NGO leaders including Shaazka Beerle of the International Center for Nonviolent Conflict, Nina May of the Renaissance Foundation and Emira Woods of the Institute of Policy Studies. Recording Artist Cynthia Basinet of California and Sahara Marathon Founder JEB Carney of Virginia were also signatories on the letter.
"The signers of this letter come from very different backgrounds and in many cases totally opposite political views, " said Scholte, "but we all agree and are united in this appeal to President Obama: the Sahrawi people of Western deserve the inalienable right to self-determination and the abuse against them by the Moroccan authorities must stop.
A complete text of the letter follows below:
The Honorable Barack Obama
President of the United States
The White House
Washington D.C.
20500 U.S.A.
Dear Mr. President:

We are writing as a diverse group of concerned citizens—Democrats, Republicans and Independents, and representatives of non-governmental organizations—to pledge our strong support for the human rights of the Sahrawi people of Western Sahara.
As Africa’s only remaining colony, the fate of Western Sahara has been uncertain since Morocco began its occupation over 30 years ago. In light of the historic friendship between the governments of the United States and the Kingdom of Morocco, as President of the United States, you have the ability to help resolve this long-standing conflict and ensure that the Sahrawi people’s human rights, including the inalienable right to self-determination, are protected.
The Sahrawi people welcome your outreach to the Muslim world and consider it an important opportunity for dialogue. The Sahrawi are a people who have demonstrated a commitment to the rule of law, democracy, human rights, equal rights for women, and religious tolerance.
In exercising their rights to freedom of assembly and expression, the Sahrawi people in Western Sahara have been subjected to arbitrary arrests and detention, forced disappearances, abuse, torture and sexual assault.
The violence against the Sahrawis by agents of the government of Morocco has been well-documented in reports by Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, Freedom House, the World Organization Against Torture, Reporters without Borders and the United States Department of State.
Western Sahara represents a clear case of a peoples’ unfulfilled right to self-determination, a right not only embedded in the United Nations Charter, but the very principle on which our own nation was founded.
The Moroccan government, rather than facilitating the realization of the long-promised United Nation-backed referendum on self-determination, has worked aggressively to thwart the efforts of the United Nations Mission for the Referendum in Western Sahara (MINURSO) to implement its mandate.
Therefore, in support of the human rights of the Sahrawi people, we respectfully request that your administration:

1. Calls upon Morocco to end the ongoing repression and human rights abuses against the Sahrawi population in the territory of Western Sahara;

2. Supports a resolution of the conflict over Western Sahara through the long-promised free, fair and transparent referendum administered by MINURSO; and,

3. Organize a meeting with representatives of the undersigned to discuss this issue further. The conflict in Western Sahara is often forgotten, along with the plight of the Sahrawi people. However, we must not allow the misinformation perpetuated by political interests to seal an uncertain fate for an entire people and obstruct the realization of their fundamental human rights.

As a group of concerned citizens and NGOs, we seek to shed light on and present a balanced analysis of the conflict. Thank you in advance for your consideration of our requests.

We appreciate the opportunity for continued dialogue on this important human rights concern. Please do not hesitate to contact the undersigned individuals or representatives of the NGOs, at 703-534-4313 with any questions, concerns or further inquiries.
Sincerely,
Letter was signed by 41 USA NGO representatives and American citizens.

Monday, July 27, 2009

THE SAHARAWI SINGER, MARIAM HASSAN, IN THE BRITISH CAPITAL

The famous saharawi singer, Mariam Hasssan, offered this week-end a great concert in the heart of the british capital, London.
The Mariam Hassan´s voice, one of the most famouse singers in Western Sahara, vibrated in Ingland, high and clear in front of thousands of spectators in the open air stage of Wodmad (World Musical Festival) celebrated this year in the United Kigdom.
The public was astonished and invaded by the deeply rooted voice of the Saharawi singer, coming from Western Sahara, the last colony in Africa.
The BBC recorded the entire concert and transmitted at night the interview of Mariem Hassan by Lucy Duran with three songs of the concert.
The famous british newspaper The Independent wrote in their first feature of the festival on 25th of July about Mariem Hassan:The early highlight is Mariem Hassan.
She plays a version of the Saharan Blues popularised by Tinariwen, the result of rebel fighters in refugee camps plugging into Led Zeppelin, and their Mississippi sources.
Black-robed Mariem Hassan is a spokeswoman for the rebel nomad tribes of Western Sahara, easy to believe as her rapid ululations drill through the air. You can only imagine the cultural and political barriers she brazens through daily. Dirty rhythmic lead guitar helps the job here. Nor are potent resistance songs her only talent. As we’re cheerily informed" Mariem will be cooking later at the Taste the World tent." Of course.

On 29th of July Mariem Hassan will be performing also in the spanish northern city of Tafalla. On the 31st of July the documental "The Voice of the Sahara" will be shown at MUMES Festival in Santa Cruz de Tenerife (Canary Islands) and on the 1st of August, Mariem at MUMES presents ‘en la JAIMA’(authentic nomad tent) music, dance and poetry from Western Sahara presenting some songs of her soon out coming new CDWestern Sahara, the last colony in the african continent.Africa.

Sunday, July 26, 2009

FATMA MAHFUD ATTENDED AN EVENT WITH THE PRESIDENT RAMOS HORTA




The President of Tomor de Leste, H.E. Ramos Horta, has participated recently in an important event on Western Sahara in the capital of Australia where among other personalities was a representative of the Saharawi Women´s organization, Mrs. Fatma Mahfoud.
The President of Timor Leste and co-recipient of the 1996 Nobel Peace Prize, Jose Ramos-Horta headlined a discussion on the status of Western Sahara, Africa´s last colony, in Melbourne, Australia on 23 July 2009.
President Ramos-Horta examined the parallels between Timor Leste and Western Sahara. He asked why the Morocco has denied the process of self-determination mandated by the United Nations. He said that Morocco can t make a serious historic claim to the territory because it agreed to partition it with Mauritania.
He also said that the African Union would not have admitted SADR to the AU if they were in any doubt about the legitimacy of the Saharawi cause. Because Africa respects the sanctity of the borders inherited from the colonial period.
Mr. Ramos Horta said that sooner or later Morocco, like Indonesia in East Timor, will realise that it is in its benefits to withdrew from Western Sahara and allow the Saharawis to have their full independence. He added that Western Sahara as a viable nation will contribute to the stability and progress of the Maghreb region.
The event was chaired by former leader of the Australian Democrats and current President of the Australian Western Sahara Association, Ms. Lyn Allison.
The panel of speakers included:
• Ms. Janelle Saffin, Member of the House of Representatives from the Labor Party (in power),

• Mr. Kamal Fadel, Polisario representative to Australia and Ambassador to Timor Leste

Lyn Allison believes Australia must play a greater role in bringing self-determination to Western Sahara.

• Ms. Fatima Mahfoud, a Representative of the National Union of Saharawi Women.

During the event a film made by the Australia ABC TV on the crucial role of Saharawi phosphate in Australian agriculture and the illegality of the importation of phosphate through Morocco was screened On July 22, 2009,
President Ramos-Horta published an article in one of the main newspapers in Australia the Sydney Morning Herald. In the article he stated “The world must support the independence of Western Sahara as a bridge between the Maghreb and the rest of Africa and as an enlightened Muslim nation bringing the Islamic world and the western democracies closer.

The Government and the people of Western Sahara deserve at least that much. As for East Timor, the worldwide support of the people, quite apart from governments and world organizations, has been, and remains significant. Those connections count and the value of ensuring truth and fiction remain separate is vital