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Western Sahara

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Flag of Western Sahara Coat of arms of Western Sahara
(In detail) (In detail)
National motto: Liberty, Democracy, Unity
Official language Hassaniya Arabic and Spanish
Capital and largest city Laâyoune - Moroccan translitteration (El Aaiún, al-'uyūn)
President (in exile) Mohamed Abdelaziz
Prime Minister (in exile) Abdelkader Taleb Oumar
Area
 - Total
 - % water
Ranked 83rd
266,000 km²
Negligible
Population
 - Total
 - Density
Ranked 182nd
267,405 (July 2004 est.)
1/km²
Independence
 - Declared
 - Claimed and controlled
From Spain
 February 27, 1976
 By Morocco
Currency Moroccan Dirham (MAD)
Time zone UTC 0
National anthem Yābaniy Es-Saharā (listen)
Internet TLD None (.eh is reserved)
Calling Code + 212 (same code as Morocco)

Western Sahara (EH in ISO 3166-1) is a territory of northwestern Africa, bordered by Morocco on the north, Algeria on the northeast, Mauritania to the east and south, and the Atlantic Ocean on the west. The largest city is El Aaiún (Laayoune), containing the majority of the population.

Whether it is part of Morocco or is the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR), set up by the indigenous Sahrawi liberation movement Front Polisario, is disputed. At present it is largely occupied, and entirely claimed, by Morocco, but this claim is not recognized by any state, whereas the SADR is recognized by several dozen. Western Sahara is on the United Nations list of Non-Self-Governing Territories.

Western Sahara is one of the most sparsely populated territories in the world, with some rankings listing it as the least dense.

History

Main article: History of Western Sahara

Morocco occupied the northern two-thirds of Western Sahara (formerly Spanish Sahara) in 1975-1976, and the rest of the territory in 1979, following Mauritania's withdrawal. A guerrilla war carried by the Polisario Front contesting Rabat's sovereignty ended in a 1991 cease-fire; a referendum on final status mandated in the cease-fire agreement has been repeatedly postponed.

The referendum, originally scheduled for 1992, was planned to give the indigenous population the option between independence or inclusion to Morocco, but has not taken place to this day. At the heart of the dispute leading to the delays lay the question of who can be registered as an indigenous voter, since the majority of the population was settled in the area after the occupation by Morocco, and since voter registration is done by Moroccan authorities. The UN had no power or political will to try to force a solution on either party. In 1997 the Houston Agreement made another attempt to implement the referendum, but again it failed. Both sides blame each other for the stalling of the referendum, but it is obvious that Morocco was never happy about the idea in the first place. Indeed, shortly after the Houston Agreement, the kingdom officially declared including an option of independence on the referendum ballot was "no longer necessary".

A US-backed document known as the "James Baker peace plan" was discussed by the UN security council in 2000, envisioning a future Western Sahara Authority (WSA), to be followed after five years by the referendum. It was rejected by both sides, although initially spawned from a Moroccan proposal and exhibiting a stark pro-Moroccan bias in comparison to the agreed-upon 1991 plan. According to Baker's draft, Moroccan settlers would be granted the vote in the Sahrawi independence referendum, and the ballot would be split three-ways by the inclusion of an unspecified "autonomy", further undermining the independece camp. Also, Morocco was allowed to keep its occupying army in the area and to retain the control over all security issues during both the autonomy years and the election. Most controversially, however, the occupying army would be tasked with fighting "terrorism" and "separatism" even during the election campaign; clauses understandably unpopular with the Polisario.

In 2003 however, after some additions spelled out the powers of the WSA (making it less reliant on the occupying power) and provided further detail on the referendum process (making it harder to stall or subvert), the plan's second draft, commonly known as Baker II, was in a quizzical suprise move accepted by the Polisario as a "basis of negotiations". After that it quickly garnered widespread international support, culminating in the UN Security Council's unanimous endorsement of the plan in the summer of 2003.

Today, however, the Baker II document appears politically dead, having lead nowhere, and with Baker having resigned his post at the UN in 2004. His resignation followed several months of failed attempts ot get Morocco to at least enter into formal negotiations on the plan, but he met with complete rejection. The new king Mohammad VI of Morocco opposes the very concept of a referendum on indpendence, and has said Morocco will never agree to one (although it already has: in principle in 1982, and in signed contracts in 1991 and 1997).

The UN has put forth no replacement strategy after the breakdown of Baker II, and renewed fighting is a possibility. In 2005, UN Secretary General Kofi Annan reported increased military activity on both sides of the front and breaches of several cease-fire provisions against strengthening military fortifications.

Morocco, uneasy with the UN process, has repeatedly tried to replace it with bilateral negotiations with Algeria, receiving vocal support from France and occasionally and currently from the United States. These negotiations would define the exact limits of a Western Sahara autonomy under Moroccan rule, but only after Morocco's "inalienable right" to the territory was recognized as a precondition to the talks. The Algerian goverment has consistently refused, claiming it has neither the will nor the right to negotiate on the behalf of the Sahrawi people, pointing instead to the Polisario and the Sahrawi republic as the legitimate representatives of Western Sahara.

Politics

Main articles: Politics of Western Sahara

The legal status of the territory and the question of its sovereignty is unresolved; the territory is contested by Morocco and Polisario Front.

See also Foreign relations of Morocco, Foreign relations of Western Sahara

Map of Western Sahara

Subdivisions

Currently, Western Sahara is largely administered by Morocco. The extent of Morocco's administration is north and west of the berm, approximately two-thirds of the territory. The Moroccan name for Western Sahara is the "Southern Provinces" - Río de Oro and Saguia el-Hamra. The remaining area is administered by the SADR. When the territory was a dependency of Spain, the same two subdivisions existed.

Geography

Main article: Geography of Western Sahara

Western Sahara is located in Northern Africa, bordering the North Atlantic Ocean, between Mauritania and Morocco. It also borders Algeria to the northeast.

Economy

Main article: Economy of Western Sahara

Western Sahara has few natural resources and lacks sufficient rainfall for most agricultural activities. Its economy is centred around nomadic herding, fishing, and phosphate mining. Most food for the urban population must be imported. All trade and other economic activities are controlled by the Moroccan government. Incomes and standards of living are substantially below those of Morocco.

The refugee camps in Tindouf, Algeria, are wholly reliant on foreign and Algerian aid. Food, clothing and even water are brought in by car and plane. Since the nineties a rudimentary monetary economy has evolved in the camps, after Spain started paying pensions to former forcibly recruited Sahrawi soldiers in its colonial army, and with money and merchandise brought in by Sahrawis working or studying abroad. A minor but significant addition comes from those Sahrawis pursuing traditional nomadic camel-herding in the Polisario-controlled parts of Western Sahara and in Mauretania.

Demographics

Main article: Demographics of Western Sahara

Map of Western Sahara and Morocco
Map of Western Sahara and Morocco

As of July 2004, and not counting the Moroccan army, an estimated 267,405 people live in the territory of Western Sahara, most of Moroccan nationality. Size of the native population versus Moroccan settlers is not known, but the settlers heavily outnumber the indigenous population. Indigenous Western Saharans, often called Sahrawis, speak a dialect called Hassaniya Arabic, also spoken in Mauritania. Sahrawis, particularly the elderly, often speak Spanish. The main religion is Islam.

See the CIA World Factbook 2004

Culture

Main article: Culture of Western Sahara

The indigenous people of Western Sahara are the Sahrawis, a nomadic or Bedouin people who speak the Hassaniya dialect of Arabic, also spoken in northern Mauritania. They are of mixed Arab-Berber descent (sometimes identified with the Middle Age muslim Mores), but consider themselves Arab.

In recent years, the West has been introduced to their culture through the release of a handful of compact discs of Sahrawi music, notably the political songs by the pro-Polisario refugee group El-Wali. The Sahrawis are Muslims of the Sunni sect and the Malikiya law school. Their interpretation of Islam has traditionally being quite liberal and adapted to nomad life (i.e. generally functioning without mosques).

The originally clan- and tribe-based society underwent a massive social upheaval in 1975, when almost the entire population was forced into exile and settled in the refugee camps of Tindouf, Algeria. Families were broken up by the flight and nomad life made impossible. The organization governing the camps, the Polisario Front, has methodically attempted to modernize Sahrawi society, placing great emphasis especially on education, the eradication of tribalism (to be replaced by a general Sahrawi nationhood) and the emancipation of women. The role of women was enhanced by their shouldering of the main responsibility for the refugee camps and government bureaucracy during the war years, as the entire male population was enrolled in the Polisario army.

Education was also assisted by refugee life. While teaching materials are still scarce, the "urbanization" of the refugee camps and the abundance of free time for camp dwellers (after the situation normalized circa 1977) greatly increased the effectiveness of literacy classes. Today, nearly 90% of refugee Sahrawis are able to read and write, the number having been less than 10% in 1975, and several thousands have reveived university educations in foreign countries as part of aid packages (mainly Algeria, Cuba and Spain). This makes the Sahrawi refugees possibly the best educated national group in all of Africa, with the exception of the Boer community in South Africa, as well as the best educated in the Arab world. In comparison, among Sahrawis in Moroccan-occupied Western Sahara, literacy rates remain low especially among women, and university graduates are rare.

To date, there have been few thorough studies of the culture due in part to the political situation. Some language and culture studies, mainly by French researchers, have been performed on Sahrawi communities in northern Mauritania, but after 30 years of conflict the Western Sahara Sahrawis have evolved into a clearly distinct nationality, its cultural and social basis being that of settled camp life, political militancy and national unity, as opposed to traditional Sahrawi nomadism and tribalism.

A question that will inevitably be posed by an independent Western Sahara is to what extent the three decades-long occupation has removed the two parts of the people from each other: while the refugee majority and their compatriots left under Moroccan rule share the same political goals, their cultural and social developments have proceeded in radically different directions.

See also

Further reading

  • Tony Hodges (1983), Western Sahara: The Roots of a Desert War, Lawrence Hill Books (ISBN 0882081527)
  • Anthony G. Pazzanita and Tony Hodges (1994), Historical Dictionary of Western Sahara, Scarecrow Press (ISBN 0810826615)
  • Toby Shelley (2004), Endgame in the Western Sahara: What Future for Africa's Last Colony?, Zed Books (ISBN 1842773410)
  • Erik Jensen (2005), Western Sahara: Anatomy of a Stalemate, International Peace Studies (ISBN 1588263053)

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