Kuwait Times

Polisario rebels launch attack

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ALGIERS: Pro-independen­ce rebels fighting Morocco over the disputed territory of Western Sahara yesterday vowed a military escalation, hours after launching an overnight attack. The Polisario Front said they had bombarded the Morocco-controlled area of Guerguerat, a crossing point between Western Sahara and Mauritania in a UN-patrolled buffer zone. A Moroccan official however told AFP there had only been “harassing fire”, labeled the attack claim part of a “propaganda war” and insisted “the situation is normal”. — AFP

ALGIERS: Pro-independen­ce rebels fighting Morocco over the disputed territory of Western Sahara yesterday vowed a military escalation, hours after launching an overnight attack. The Polisario Front said they had bombarded the Morocco-controlled area of Guerguerat, a crossing point between Western Sahara and Mauritania in a UN-patrolled buffer zone.

AFP could not obtain independen­t confirmati­on of the reported rocket strikes, or of any possible casualties, from the remote desert region that is largely offlimits to journalist­s. “The war will continue and escalate,” senior Polisario security official Sidi Ould Loukal told AFP by phone. “All positions of the Moroccan army are targets of this war.”

A Moroccan official however told AFP there had only been “harassing fire”, labeled the attack claim part of a “propaganda war” and insisted “the situation is

normal”. Moroccan TV channel 2M showed images of trucks in the Guerguerat area and reported the situation was “normal” early yesterday. Western Sahara is a former Spanish colony contested since the 1970s between Morocco, which controls three-quarters of it, and the Algeria-backed Polisario Front, which demands independen­ce for what it calls the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic.

A UN-backed political process has been suspended since March 2019, and the two sides remain separated by a 2,700-kilometre (1,700-mile) sand barrier. Tensions rose sharply when Morocco on November 13 sent troops into the buffer zone to reopen the only road leading from Morocco to Mauritania and the rest of West Africa, after separatist­s had blocked it the previous month. The Polisario responded by declaring the 1991 ceasefire null and void, arguing the road had not existed when the truce was signed and was therefore illegal. The two sides are reported to have since exchanged regular fire along the demarcatio­n line.

‘War zone’

The pro-independen­ce rebels overnight launched four rockets toward Guerguerat, the Sahrawi press agency SPS said, also reporting attacks along the security

barrier. The Guerguerat road crossing had been “closed” and the situation there was “chaotic”, said Ould Oukal, secretary general of the Sahrawi ministry of security. “This is only the beginning,” he said. “It is a warning to the users of this road and this land. The whole territory of Western Sahara is a war zone and is not safe.” The senior Moroccan official contacted by AFP in Rabat however said: “There was harassing fire near the area of Guerguerat, but it did not affect the trunk road, traffic was not disrupted. “It’s been part of a cycle of harassment for more than three months,” he said.

“There is a desire to create a propaganda war, a media war, on the existence of a war in the Sahara” but “the situation is normal”, he said. The UN-backed ceasefire deal was meant to lead to a referendum on self-determinat­ion for the Britain-sized territory, home to about one million people. Morocco has offered autonomy but maintains the territory is a sovereign part of the kingdom. Rabat has won the recognitio­n of its claim to sovereignt­y over the entire disputed territory from numerous countries which have opened consulates in Western Sahara. Former US president Donald Trump late last year also backed Morocco, breaking decades of precedent, in exchange for Rabat normalizin­g relations with Israel. —AFP

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