SAHARA PRESS SERVICE

SPS
SPAIN/SADR/DECOLONISATION/MEDIAS

The Green March 30 years after, by Fernando Arias-Salgado ex- Spanish Ambassador to Morocco 

08.11.05

 

 

 

Madrid, 08/11/2005 (SPS) The former Spanish Ambassador to Morocco, Fernando Arias-Salgado, publicised an opinion in the Madrid’s based newspaper, ABC, in its Sunday edition, which we considered interesting to translate for our readers and to publish for the ones of them who can not read Spanish.

 

Mr. Arias-Salgado tackled the consequences of the Spanish precipitated withdrawal from Western Sahara, as well as the best ways of resolving the conflict on the territory on democratic basis and on the basis of the international legality in the interest of Spain, Europe and the Maghreb.

 

Here is the complete text of this opinion SPS translated from Spanish:

 

"

"The Green March", 30 years after

 

The relations between Spain and Morocco and the future of the Maghreb will depend on the will of Spain to assume, once and for all, its responsibility as a democratic European country having big national interests in this African region.

 

Last November the 6th 1975 king Hassan the II of Morocco decided to defy the United Nations and the international legality regarding their principles on decolonisation. He launched a march (the Green March) of 350.000 non armed civilians towards the Western Sahara so as to “recuperate” the territory. This march was organised under the protection of the Moroccan Royal Army. A decision that was personally declared by the monarch in October the 16th 1975, who based it on an arbitrary interpretation of the legal opinion of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) on Western Sahara, that was publicised the same date.

 

The ICJ, recognised the existence of judicial relations of « fidelity» (allegiance) between the Sultan of Morocco and some tribes in the territory of Western Sahara in the past, but declared on another hand, in very clear terms, that Morocco and Mauritania have absolutely no sovereignty over the territory of Western Sahara.

 

Consequently, the Court concluded, in paragraph 162 of its opinion, that the resolution 1514 (XV) adopted by the UN’s General Assembly in 1960 on the granting of independence to colonial countries and peoples must be enforced with a view to decolonise the Western Sahara, and it especially stressed on "the principle of self-determination through the free and authentic expression of the will of the population of the territory".

 

The UN’s Security Council, solicited by the Spanish Government because of the seriousness of the situation created by the green march, adopted three resolutions then: resolution 377(1975), in October the 22nd; resolution 379 (1975), in November the 02nd, and resolution 380 (1975), in November the 06th the same day of the starting of the march.

 

In these resolutions, unanimously adopted, the Security Council deplored the launching of the green march and asked for the immediate withdrawal of the participants. In vain, that same day, the march, and in complete violation to the international legality regarding the decolonisation, crossed the borders of the non-self-governing territory that was under Spanish administration.

 

In November 1975, the Spanish Government, chaired by M. Arias Navarro, while the General (Franco) was in agony, ceded to the Moroccan pressures after a set of negotiations in Agadir and Madrid, and signed a "declaration of principles" in which a temporary Moroccan-Mauritanian administration is installed in Western Sahara to whom Spain would transfer the responsibilities and powers it has over the territory as an administrating power.

 

By this unilateral decision, which is legally questionable and which excluded the recognition of the right to self-determination of the Saharawi population that was confirmed by the ICJ, the participation of Western Sahara was "falsified" and the abandon of the Saharawi people to their fate between the hands of Moroccans and Mauritanians was passed. In February the 26th 1976 Spain abandoned the temporary administration to put an end to its civil and military presence in the territory.   

 

The tragic consequences of this unilateral decision are known by everybody. A 15 years war waged until the enforcement of the case-fire in September 1991 between Morocco and Polisario Front. Thousands people died and disappeared. Millions dollars uselessly wasted in the sands of the desert. A 2.000 Kms long wall, filed with mines in the two sides, divides the territory from the north to the south. A big party of the Saharawi population was pushed to exile and persecuted. The entire region of the Maghreb lives under a state of political instability and blockage. Thirteen years after, the conflict is still ongoing and the political solution proposed by the UN’s Security Council; known under the name Baker Plan II, is still blocked.

 

Thinking about the future of the Maghreb, especially the relations between Spain and Morocco, I though it was interesting to go back a little bit to the past so as to remind the declarations of King Hassan II of Morocco to a French journalist, Eric Laurent, ten years ago, which were also reproduced by another journalist, Ignace Dalle, in his recent book in French, "Les trois rois ; la monarchie marocaine de l'indépendance à nos jours" (Three kings; Moroccan Monarchy from independence to the current days). In his statements concerning the green march king Hassan the II, affirmed, according to the mentioned journalist, that "it is a question of a psychological bet. I knew that Franco and his close collaborators are militaries. If they react as real militaries they won’t start fire on 350.000 non armed civilians". The monarch added according to the journalist: "to tell you the truth it was a cruel blackmailing, but no law consider it as illegal".

 

In the anniversary of these pitiful dates of the Spanish history, in which I think, one of the biggest strategic mistakes of the Spanish foreign policy was made, it will be necessary then to think about our relations with the Maghreb in general and with Morocco in particular. The green march contributed to the consolidation of the Moroccan monarchy represented by King Hassan the II, during international circumstances that were totally different from the current in Spain and in Morocco. Spain could have passed the Sahara to the UN’s temporary administration until the will of the Saharawi population is expressed in a valid way. That was the international legality at the time. The Spanish Government did not respect it. The strategic option of signing the Accords of Madrid in November the 14th 1675 did not bring peace, neither stability nor development to the Maghreb. It did not contribute to facilitate the development of the common interests that exist for geographic reasons between Spain and Morocco. In the future it is not necessary that this situation stay unchangeable. Regarding the new international state of affairs and the situation in the two countries, the political solutions must be democratic and we can not admit any other criteria to legitimise territorial acquisitions based on pretended "historical rights".

 

The democratic Government of Spain is now chaired by the Secretary General of the PSOE, Mr. Rodriguez Zapatero. It is perhaps the moment to put right, though partly, the damages caused to the Saharawi people by the last Government of the regime of Franco, and this through the support -not only via statements but also with deeds- of the referendum on self-determination in suspension since 1675, which is adopted in all the UN’s resolutions especially in the Settlement Plan, accepted by Morocco and in the Baker Plan II, Morocco continues to reject.

 

In my personal and professional opinion, besides my experience and knowledge about this question along the last 30 years, the relations between Spain and Morocco and the future of the Maghreb will depend on the Spanish Government’s will to assume, once and for all, its responsibilities as an occidental and European democratic country that has national interests in this African region, to which it should be recalled, Spain belongs geographically and strategically. (SPS)

 

010/090/666/TRD 081339 nov 05 SPS

 

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SPS
SADR/ITALY

Sit-in of solidarity with the Saharawi people this November the 12th in Bologna 

 

 

 

 

 

Roma, 08/11/2005 (SPS) A sit-in calling to the end of the repression in the occupied territories in Western Sahara and the enforcement of a self-determination referendum for the Saharawi people will take place this November the 12th in front of the Moroccan Consul in Bologna, reported Algerian Press Service, APS.

 

A large participation is expected for this demonstration that is organised following the request of associations of solidarity with the Saharawi people (ANSPS) of Emilie Romagna and the International Bureau for Human Rights in Western Sahara (BIRDHSO). The demonstrators will also ask for the respect of human rights in the occupied territories, the bringing before justice of the killers of Martyr Lembarki Hamdi, "who died under torture he was subjected to by Moroccan police", the release of all Saharawi political prisoners and the enforcement of the UN’s resolutions and Saharawi people’s right to self-determination.

      

''The wall of silence that seals Saharawi people’s peaceful protests and the blind repression by the Moroccan kingdom must be broken", indicates the press release of the organising Committee, underlining the seriousness of the events that are taking place in the territories of Western Sahara under Moroccan occupation.

 

The sit-in will also be an opportunity, the release adds, to support the international conference of solidarity with the Saharawi people that will be held in November the 15th in Madrid. The organisers aim from this occasion to denounce the Accords of Madrid of November the 14th 1975 and to recall the political and historical responsibility of the Spanish Government which ceded the Western Sahara to Moroccan occupation.

 

On another hand, another sit-in of protest was held last October the 14th in front of the Moroccan diplomatic representation in Roma, within the framework of the actions decided during the 31st European conference of coordination of the support to the Saharawi people (Eucoco), which took place last September the 23rd to the 25th in Mol (Belgium). (SPS)

 

010/090/700/TRD 082002 nov 05 SPS

 

 

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SPS
SADR/MOROCCO/MEDIAS

Mr. Boukhari: Saharawi people reject "autonomy within Moroccan sovereignty" 

 

 

 
 

 

London, 08/11/2005 (SPS) Polisario Front’s Representative to the United Nations, Boukhari Ahmed, rejected the preposition of king Mohamed VI "to accord an autonomy" to Western Sahara within the framework of "the Moroccan sovereignty".      

 

In an interview he gave on Monday to the British radio station, BBC, Mr. Boukhari affirmed that the Moroccan "preposition" is contrary to the position of the international community, stressing that Western Sahara "is not a Moroccan province" that the king of Morocco can propose an autonomy for it.

 

It is a "colony", he added, recalling that to the UN’s Security Council and General Assembly, the Western Sahara question is a matter of decolonisation.

 

The UN approved Saharawi people’s right to self-determination through a free, honest referendum apart of any pressures, Mr. Boukhari stressed, affirming that the Moroccan position "conveys too much stubbornness". He also denounced "the policy of the impasse", Morocco adopts as a strategy.

 

In this respect, he recalled Saharawi people’s attachment to its self-determination to decide if i twill build its own State or join Morocco.

 

To the Polisario Front, Morocco is responsible of the obstacles that hindered the settlement of the Western Sahara’s conflict conforming to the international legality, which stressed the necessity of the holding of a self-determination referendum Morocco tries to avoid by all means.

    

010/090/700/TRD 081958 nov 05 SPS

 

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SPS
OCCUPIED TERRITORIES/REPRESSION/MEDIAS

New arrests in El Aaiun, according to Spanish agency 

 

 

 
 

 

Madrid, 07/11/2005 (SPS) Moroccan police forces « brutally repressed'', a Saharawi demonstration in favour of the independence, last Saturday in Maatallah neighbourhood in El Aaiun, the occupied capital of Western Sahara, and many demonstrators were arrested, reported a correspondent of the Spanish press Agency, EFE.

 

The same source said that at the eve of the commemortaion of the 30th anniverssary of the "green mrch", which symbolises the Moroccan invasion of Western Sahara, the neighbourhood of Maatallah was "strongly controled" by Moroccan auxiliary forces and by agents of the Group Urban of Security (GUS). 

 

Confrontation, i twas indicated, started when young Saharawis started chanting slogans in favour of Polisario Front and against the Moroccan occupation of their country.

 

"The police had violently beaten two young Saharawis and tried to stop the cameras of the televisions and of the photographs (Spanish journalists present on the ground) from taking pictures of the scene", EFE reported, stressing that the groups of young demonstrators were purchased in streets and neighbourhoods.

 

Seven demonstrators were arrested on Saturday in El Aaiun added to another group of 4 young persons arrested Friday in the same city. All these young persons are still detained in police stations where they are submitted to torture and brutal interrogations, it should be recalled. 

 

According to EFE, Colomina Neighbourhood, where the house of the family Martyr Lembarki, the young Saharawi killed by Moroccan forces last October the 29th, is sealed by troops of auxiliary forces. His sister, Salma, the agency quotes, reaffirmed that Hamdi has died after he was subjected to torture by GUS’s agents. (SPS)

 

010/090/700/TRD 081952 nov 05 SPS

 

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SPS
SADR/BELIZE/DIPLOMACY

The New Saharawi Ambassador presents his letters of credence to the General Governor of Belize 

 

 

 
 

 

Belize, 08/11/2005 (SPS) New Saharawi Ambassador, Souleymane Tayeb, presented his letter of credence, on Monday in Belmopan, to the General Governor of Belize, COLVILE N. Young, as an extraordinary and plenipotentiary Ambassador of the Saharawi Arab Democratic Republic to Belize.

 

The new Ambassador declared to the press that his accreditation as Ambassador will "certainly allow the consolidation of the bilateral relations of brotherhood and friendship" between the two countries.

 

He also expressed to the General Governor of Belize, "the deep gratitude of (his) Government and people for the support to the Saharawi cause in the most difficult moments of the peace process.

 

On his part, the Governor of Belize reaffirmed "the unconditional support of hi people to the Saharawi cause".

 

Mr. Souleymane Tayeb, will be in charge of this new post beside his post of Ambassador to Panama. (SPS)

 

040/090/000/TRD 080544 nov 05 SPS

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