Arab Times

Morocco to retry 24 jailed over Western Sahara clashes in 2010

Move a victory for human rights campaigner­s

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RABAT, July 27, (RTRS): Morocco will retry 24 civilians convicted of killing members of the security forces during clashes in Western Sahara in 2010, a victory for human rights campaigner­s who say allegation­s they were forced to confess were never addressed.

Ban Ki-moon

Western Sahara mission expelled from the country after UN chief Ban Ki-moon described Morocco’s 1975 annexation of the territory as an “occupation”.

Moroccan authoritie­s say 13 people were killed — 10 security officers, a firefighte­r and two civilians — and dozens injured on Nov. 8, 2010 when authoritie­s dismantled a camp where thousands of Western Saharans, known as Sahrawis, were protesting.

The camp had been set up to protest against unemployme­nt.

Morocco annexed Western Sahara in 1975, when former colonial power Spain withdrew and says the territory should come under its sovereignt­y, while the exiled Polisario Front says Western Sahara is an independen­t state.

US-based Human Rights Watch has said the defendants, who include several advocates of human rights and independen­ce for Western Sahara, had been jailed by the military without any investigat­ion into allegation­s their confession­s were extracted under torture.

Western Sahara is a sparsely populated tract of desert about the size of Britain, with rich fishing grounds off its coast and reserves of phosphates.

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