New Era

Spanish judge begins questionin­g Polisario leader

-

MADRID - A Spanish judge on Tuesday questioned the leader of Western Sahara’s independen­ce movement, whose presence in Spain has angered Morocco, about allegation­s of torture and genocide.

The closed-door hearing at Spain’s National Court in Madrid began at 10h15 am (0815 GMT) with Brahim Ghali, who heads the Algeria-backed Polisario Front, testifying by video conference from a hospital in northern Spain where he is recovering from a severe case of Covid-19.

Ghali, who is also the president of the Sahrawi Democratic Arab Republic, a self-declared state since 1976, is facing two investigat­ions in Spain.

After completing his investigat­ions, the presiding judge will have to decide whether to charge the Polisario leader or dismiss the lawsuits against him.

Ghali was severely ill when he arrived at a hospital in the northern Spanish town of Logrono in midApril, with his presence in Spain triggering a major diplomatic spat between Rabat and Madrid.

Last month, Spain was caught off guard when as many as 10 000 people surged into its tiny north African enclave of Ceuta as Moroccan border guards looked the other way in what was widely seen as a punitive political gesture.

The Polisario Front has long fought for the independen­ce of Western Sahara, a desert region bigger than Britain, which was a Spanish colony until 1975.

Morocco controls 80% of the territory, while the Polisario Front runs the rest, an area bordering Mauritania that is almost totally landlocked.

One of the investigat­ions relates to allegation­s of torture at Sahrawi refugee camps in Tindouf, a town in western Algeria.

Polisario dissident Fadel Breika, who also holds Spanish nationalit­y, made the accusation­s in 2020.

While a Spanish court initially rejected the complaint, earlier this year it agreed to reopen the case.

The second investigat­ion relates to allegation­s of genocide, murder, terrorism, torture and disappeara­nces made in 2007 by the Sahrawi Associatio­n for the Defence of Human Rights (ASADEDH), which is based in Spain.

The Spanish judge handling this case has refused to impose any precaution­ary measures - such as seizing the Polisario leader’s passport as requested by the complainan­ts - arguing there are no “clear indication­s of his involvemen­t” in the crimes of which he has been accused.

Rabat has already warned the Spanish government that allowing Ghali to “go home, bypass Spanish justice and ignore the victims” would further worsen ties.

In 2016, Ghali was summoned for questionin­g in relation to the second complaint when he was due to attend a conference in Spain in support of the Sahrawi people. He eventually cancelled his trip.

Rabat considers Ghali to be a “war criminal”, and Morocco’s foreign ministry warned Monday that the crisis over his presence in Spain would “not be resolved with a single court hearing”.

It once again demanded a “transparen­t investigat­ion” over Ghali’s arrival in Spain with what it said was a forged passport. The crisis, it said, was a “test of the reliabilit­y” of Morocco-Spain ties.

In reply, Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said it was “unacceptab­le” that Morocco “attack the borders of Spain” by letting migrants into Ceuta due to “difference­s in foreign policy”.

Citing diplomatic sources, Spain’s El Pais newspaper said Ghali was “critically ill” when he arrived on a medicalise­d Algerian government plane on 18 April, bearing a diplomatic passport.

It said he was admitted to the hospital under a false name for “security reasons”.

The UN refers to Western Sahara as a “non-self-governing territory”. Morocco is willing to offer it autonomy within Morocco but not independen­ce.

After 16 years of war, Rabat and the Polisario signed a ceasefire in 1991, but a UN-backed referendum on self-determinat­ion has been repeatedly postponed.

Hostilitie­s resumed last November when the Polisario declared the ceasefire to be over after Morocco sent troops into an UN-patrolled buffer zone to reopen a key road.

 ?? Photo: Nampa/AFP ?? In this file photo from 19 October 2017, Brahim Ghali, Polisario secretary general and president of the self-proclaimed Sahrawi Arabic Democratic Republic, speaks following a meeting with UN envoy at the Sahrawi refugee camp of Rabouni. He appeared before a Madrid court yesterday to answer allegation­s of torture.
Photo: Nampa/AFP In this file photo from 19 October 2017, Brahim Ghali, Polisario secretary general and president of the self-proclaimed Sahrawi Arabic Democratic Republic, speaks following a meeting with UN envoy at the Sahrawi refugee camp of Rabouni. He appeared before a Madrid court yesterday to answer allegation­s of torture.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Namibia