Chattanooga Times Free Press

Hostilitie­s remain

Independen­ce leader: Wall won’t stop Western Sahara fight

- ARITZ PARRA

DAJLA REFUGEE CAMP, Algeria — The leader of the Western Sahara independen­ce movement says that fighting with Morocco will continue across a long wall cutting through Africa’s vast desert until the internatio­nal community delivers on an unfulfille­d promise of selfdeterm­ination for the Saharawi people.

The United Nations considers Western Sahara as Africa’s last territory to be decolonize­d, but its envoys have failed to set the stage for a referendum on its future since a ceasefire was signed 30 years ago between Morocco, which had annexed it in 1975, and the independen­ce-seeking Polisario Front.

The conflict has received renewed attention due to growing frustratio­n among the Saharawi people, but also after the United States last year disregarde­d the U.N. efforts by backing Morocco’s claim to sovereignt­y over the entire disputed territory.

U.N. Secretary General Antonio Guterres has recently appointed a new special envoy to Western Sahara, Staffan De Mistura.

In a rare public appearance following a long convalesce­nce for covid-19 this year, Polisario Front leader Brahim Ghali on Tuesday defended his movement’s decision in November 2020 to call off the 1991 ceasefire.

“There will be neither peace, nor stability, nor a just and lasting solution to the Moroccan-Saharawi conflict unless the U.N. Security Council assumes its responsibi­lities in responding frankly and firmly to the aggressive and expansioni­st practices of the Moroccan occupying power,” Ghali said in a speech to hundreds of Saharawis at the Dajla refugee camp in Algeria’s southern Tindouf province.

Hostilitie­s have remained at a relatively small scale, although Polisario officials told The Associated Press that at least eight of their fighters have died in combat or retreating from attacks launched on Moroccan army positions along the wall.

But the conflict could escalate and destabiliz­e the entire North Africa region, Ghali said.

“The war is already raging on the ground. And its dangers and repercussi­ons on the region cannot be avoided if the United Nations continues to manage the crisis instead of solving it,” Ghali said.

Algeria has sheltered Saharawi refugees since Morocco annexed their homeland. But now the Saharawi who did not flee have become a minority in the Moroccan-controlled part of Western Sahara, due to policies that encourage Moroccan settlers to come live there.

With a heavy security entail, Ghali was in Dajla to mark the day of Saharawi unity, which remembers the date when major senior Saharawi tribal leaders and former members of Spain’s colonial administra­tion backed the Polisario’s struggle for an independen­t state.

In their constant search for allies, both Morocco and the Polisario have sought to win diplomatic battles in the U.N. and with other stakeholde­rs. The Biden administra­tion has not carried out actions to make effective on the ground the recognitio­n of Morocco’s sovereignt­y that former U.S. President Donald Trump announced in a tweet at the end of his mandate.

Meanwhile in Europe, a top European Union court recently sided with the Polisario in recognizin­g that Morocco should not be considered

“The war is already raging on the ground. And its dangers and repercussi­ons on the region cannot be avoided if the United Nations continues to manage the crisis instead of solving it.” — Brahim Ghali, Polisario Front leader

the legitimate party for the bloc to sign fishing and agricultur­al agreements with pertaining to Western Sahara.

In his speech Tuesday, Ghali accused “countries, companies or others” doing business with Morocco in the disputed territory of supporting “an illegal, aggressive and expansioni­st operation, and the theft and looting of the wealth of an oppressed and defenseles­s people.”

Ghali was hospitaliz­ed in Spain in April, a move that the Spanish government tried to keep secret but that angered the Moroccan government in Rabat.

Shortly after the news came out, over 10,000 Moroccans flooded across the Spanish border, triggering a humanitari­an crisis that sent relations between Madrid and Rabat to a decades-long low.

 ?? (AP/Bernat Armangue) ?? A Polisario Front military orchestra performs Tuesday during a National Unity Day event in the Dajla refugee camp in Algeria.
(AP/Bernat Armangue) A Polisario Front military orchestra performs Tuesday during a National Unity Day event in the Dajla refugee camp in Algeria.
 ?? ?? Saharawi refugees attend a rally
Monday prior to their National Unity Day in the Bujador refugee camp.
Saharawi refugees attend a rally Monday prior to their National Unity Day in the Bujador refugee camp.
 ?? ?? Soldiers from the Polisario Front pack Tuesday after a National Unity Day event.
Soldiers from the Polisario Front pack Tuesday after a National Unity Day event.
 ?? ?? Brahim Ghali, head of the Polisario Front and the self-declared Sahrawi Democratic Arab Republic, gestures the victory sign Tuesday during a National Unity Day event.
Brahim Ghali, head of the Polisario Front and the self-declared Sahrawi Democratic Arab Republic, gestures the victory sign Tuesday during a National Unity Day event.
 ?? ?? Saharawi refugees walk toward a National Unity Day event Tuesday in the Dajla refugee camp.
Saharawi refugees walk toward a National Unity Day event Tuesday in the Dajla refugee camp.

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