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Ban Ki-moon Visits Western Sahara Refugee Camps

  • A Sahwari efugee child at the Dakhla Refugee Camp in Algeria.

    A Sahwari efugee child at the Dakhla Refugee Camp in Algeria. | Photo: teleSUR

Published 5 March 2016
Opinion

More than 40 years have passed since the Saharawi refugee crisis began and nowadays these people are still living in exile.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon finally decided to visit the wrongfully-forgotten Sahwari refugee camps in southern Algeria, where close to 200,000 stateless people have been living in impoverished conditions for about 40 years in what has been condemned as a massive violation of human rights.

Ban, whose visit is apparently aimed at ending a territorial dispute between the Sahwari Polisario Front and Morocco, took too long to arrive to this squalid region to promise Saturday he “will spare no effort” to help make progress towards a just, lasting and mutually acceptable solution for Western Sahara.

But despite the long standing international disregard to the plight, Polisario leader Mohammed Abdelaziz agreed the U.N. had “lost its way” over Western Sahara, but called Ban's visit the best opportunity to reset negotiations over a referendum for self-determination.

“We want to hear from the secretary-general in order to achieve a solution this year,” Abdelaziz said.

But a solution depends on international resolve, as Morocco wants Western Sahara, which is rich in phosphates and possibly offshore oil and as, to be an autonomous part of Morocco and disagrees with Polisario over who should take part in the referendum.

The U.N. chief’s visit is meant to contribute to international efforts to restart negotiations and thus end a dispute between the  Polisario Front independence movement and Morocco over the Western Sahara territory.

Ban Ki-moon visited Sahrawi refugee camps to speed up the end of 4 decades of exile, Sergio Rodrigo teleSUR Correspondent in Algeria. 

The Polisario — considered by the U.N. as the legitimate representative of the Sahrawi people — says the territory belongs to ethnic Sahrawis, whose troops waged a guerrilla war after Morocco took over the area from colonial Spain in 1975 until a U.N.-brokered cease-fire in 1991. The two sides have been deadlocked since.

The Sahrawi refugee crisis began in 1975, and today these people are still living in exile in highly vulnerable and inhumane conditions, and hardly no means for income, forcing them to depend on the good will of international communities. In the meantime, their families are back home in the occupied territory.

RELATED: 40 Years in, Western Sahara Can Count on Cuba & Latin America

The illegal occupation by Morocco over the Western Sahara has only been condemned internationally as a "flagrant violation to the international law." The condemnation, however, has done nothing to improve the conditions of those living in the refugee camps.

The U.N. chief met with Sahrawi officials and expressed his support for an urgent referendum on the self-determination of the Sahrawi people. But, the Kingdom of Morocco resists.

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