Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Polisario blames UN over ‘political deadlock’

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PRO-INDEPENDEN­CE rebels fighting Morocco for Western Sahara said Saturday the United Nations was responsibl­e for “political deadlock” over the disputed territory, on the 45th anniversar­y of their unilateral declaratio­n of independen­ce.

The Algeria-backed Polisario Front controls about a fifth of the vast, arid territory of Western Sahara, and is demanding a promised UN-run referendum on self-determinat­ion.

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

“We ask the United Nations to urgently fulfill its promises: that of ridding Western Sahara of colonizati­on, in accordance with its charter and its resolution­s,” Polisario leader Brahim Ghali said in a speech at a refugee camp.

“The Polisario Front tried for 29 years to avoid war by making concession­s, but it has faced a total absence of cooperatio­n both from the Moroccan side and the U.N.,” added senior Polisario official Khatri Addouh, cited by the official Sahrawi news agency Sahara Press Service (SPS).

The U.N. is responsibl­e for the “political deadlock” on the Sahrawi question due to its “laxity” in the face of Morocco, Addouh was quoted as saying from a Sahrawi refugee camp near the Algerian desert town of Tindouf.

The Polisario fought a war of independen­ce with Morocco from 1975 to 1991 and its leaders proclaimed the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR), which remains internatio­nally unrecogniz­ed, on Feb. 27, 1976. The U.N. has repeatedly failed to find a lasting settlement since it brokered a cease-fire on the line of control in 1991.

U.N.-led negotiatio­ns involving Morocco and the Polisario, with Algeria and Mauritania as observers, have been suspended since March 2019.

On Saturday in Tindouf, Polisario armed forces marched in a military parade attended by Sahrawi leaders to mark the anniversar­y. Soldiers marched behind a woman draped in a Sahrawi flag, wearing masks to protect against the coronaviru­s.

‘KEEPING UP THE STRUGGLE’

Tensions rose sharply in November when Morocco sent troops into a buffer zone to reopen the only road leading from Morocco to Mauritania and the rest of West Africa after the separatist­s had blocked it the previous month.

The Polisario responded by declaring the 1991 U.N.-backed cease-fire null and void, arguing the road had not existed when the truce was signed and was therefore illegal.

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 Sahrawi people will keep up their struggle for justice and to liberate Sahrawi territory from the Moroccan presence,” Brahim Ghali, president of the self-proclaimed SADR, said Saturday from the Aousserd refugee camp.

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.

The Polisario considers the opening of the missions a “violation of internatio­nal law and an attack on the legal status of Western Sahara as a non-autonomous territory.” In December, Morocco normalized ties with Israel in a diplomatic quid pro quo that saw Washington back Moroccan rule over Western Sahara, a move that infuriated the Polisario. Despite the move, the U.N. insists its position on the territory remains “unchanged.”

The Sahrawis hope the administra­tion of U.S. President Joe Biden will revisit the decision, which they say “violates all decisions and resolution­s of all internatio­nal bodies.”

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