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BBC: Africa's last colony   Message List  
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Africa's last colony

BBC, Tifariti, Western Sahara
21. Oct. 2003

By Pascale Harter

It is one of Africa's longest ongoing wars. Forgotten, but still
not over. Every four years the Polisario Front holds a congress, to
discuss how to proceed with their 27-year battle against Morocco
for self-determination of the disputed Western Sahara.

Hundreds of Polisario representatives based as far a field as
Australia make their way back for the event.


This year, for the first time since a ceasefire was signed with
Morocco in 1991, the Polisario held their congress in the heart of
what they proudly call "liberated territory".

Most of the international community consider it to be in south-west
Algeria, just 300 kilometres from Tindouf.

For some it is a no-mans land under de facto control of the
Polisario.

For Morocco, it is just a threat; Tifariti is 100 kilometres from
the Moroccan wall of defence, a wall in the middle of the Sahara
desert, stretching the length of the Moroccan-controlled Sahara
border with Algeria.

Holding the congress here was a ratcheting up of the pressure for a
settlement.

Bone-shaking drive

Polisario Secretary General Mohamed Abdelaziz says the choice of
venue was intended to remind Morocco that the Polisario is there,
occupying its land, and pursuing the struggle for independence with
firmness.

He also told the congress that a return to all-out war with Morocco
was one option to be considered.

For journalists, it was a chance to see the land the Polisario is
fighting over.

It's hard to get to Tifariti. It takes nine hours of bone-shaking
off-piste driving across hundreds of kilometres of barren desert.

The only landmarks are the very occasional tent inhabited by
Saharawi nomads, surviving under the unrelenting sun with only a
deep well of sandy water, and if they're wealthy, a few goats.

Tifariti itself is hardly any better. When Western Sahara belonged
to Spain, it was a thriving crossroads for desert traders.

For two and a half decades it has been a crumbling military base.

'Zero-sum'

In its grounds the tail of a Moroccan air force jet shot down
during the war is a prized monument.

Now it is more often used as a washing line. Before I could take a
photo, the Polisario officer accompanying me shouted at his men to
remove their clothes which were drying on the plane under the
scorching sun of the Sahara.

It was a telling indication of the state of the war.

Since 1976 the Polisario Front, the government of exiled Saharawis
fighting for self-determination of the Western Sahara, has been at
war with Morocco.

The United Nations has had a force on the ground monitoring the
ceasefire since 1991.

Minurso was intended to be a six month mission to facilitate the
holding of a referendum.

Twelve years later, it is still there, but the referendum looks no
nearer.

Kofi Anan has called the negotiations a "zero-sum game".

Little change

Despite the gung-ho talk by President Mohamed Abdelaziz, at the
congress the Polisario threw its weight behind the latest
UN-brokered peace plan.

This is a recycled proposal from Kofi Anan's personal envoy to the
region, James Baker.

He proposes five years of autonomy for the Western Sahara under the
auspices of the Moroccan Government, followed by a referendum.

In the referendum Saharawis and Moroccans from the north who
settled in the 1970s will be asked to choose between independence
and integration with Morocco.

Morocco has already rejected the latest Baker Plan. On a visit to
Morocco one week ago, French President Jacques Chirac pledged his
full support to Morocco.

As a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council,
France is likely to protect the North African Kingdom from any
pressure the Security Council might exert in order to close, once
and for all, this last open file at the United Nations
Decolonisation Committee.

But looking out at the desert around Tifariti it is hard to imagine
anything changing; the landscape becoming more kindly disposed to
human habitation, or the Polisario ever abandoning their claim to
it.

Published: 2003/10/21 01:49:26 GMT

© BBC MMIII

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URL: http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/africa/3208012.stm
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Forwarded by:
___________________________________________
Norwegian Support Committee for Western Sahara
wsahara2@...

*** Referendum now! ***
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Sahara-update
___________________________________________




Tue Oct 21, 2003 8:48 am

eirikhk
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Africa's last colony BBC, Tifariti, Western Sahara 21. Oct. 2003 By Pascale Harter It is one of Africa's longest ongoing wars. Forgotten, but still not over....
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