Gulf Today

Morocco summons Spain envoy over Polisario leader

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RABAT: Morocco summoned the Spanish ambassador in “exasperati­on” ater the leader of the Western Saharan independen­ce movement was allowed into Spain for medical care, a source said.

The Spanish foreign ministry said on Thursday that Brahim Ghali, who heads the Algeria-backed Polisario Front, is being treated for COVID-19 and had been transferre­d to Spain for “strictly humanitari­an reasons.”

“This will not obstruct or trouble the excellent relations Spain has with Morocco,” Spanish foreign minister Arancha Gonzalez Laya said at a press conference on Friday.

But her counterpar­t Nasser Bourita expressed

Morocco’ s“in comprehens­ion and exasperati­on” and “demanded an explanatio­n” from Spain’s ambassador, a Moroccan official said late on Saturday.

The status of Western Sahara, a former Spanish colony which the United Nations classifies as a “non-self-governing territory,” has for decades pited Morocco against the Polisario, who demand a referendum on an independen­t state.

Ghali, who is in his seventies, is recovering well, according to the movement.

On Saturday a group of refugees appealed to the Spanish authoritie­s to arrest him, in a video published by Moroccan media.

They allege that he is responsibl­e for human rights crimes carried out at a camp for refugees from Western Sahara in the town of Tindouf in neighbouri­ng Algeria run by the Polisario.

Human Rights Watch in 2014 published a report alleging that residents of several Polisarior­un camps around Tindouf faced curbs on some rights, pointing to “credible allegation­s” of harassment of critics.

The Polisario fought a war of independen­ce with Morocco from 1975 to 1991 and its leaders proclaimed the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR) in February 1976.

A war with the Polisario ensued, ending in 1991 with a Un-brokered ceasefire.

Morocco has offered autonomy but maintains the territory is a sovereign part of the kingdom.

Tensions rose sharply in November 2020 ater Rabat deployed the army to reopen the kingdom’s only highway into West Africa, which had been blocked by the Polisario, who argued it was built in violation of the UN truce deal.

The two sides have since exchanged regular fire along the demarcatio­n line, though claims are difficult to independen­tly verify in the hard-to-access area.

The Polisario Front announced earlier this month that its police chief Addah Al Bendir was killed in the field, in an atack that has been reported as a possible first ever drone strike by the Moroccan military in the contested territory.

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