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Mohamed Abdelaziz (Sahrawi politician)

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File:Mohamed Abdelaziz of Western Sahara.jpg
Mohamed Abdelaziz, pictured c. 2000

Mohamed Abdelaziz (محمد عبد العزيز) (born 1947) is the Secretary General of the Polisario Front and the exiled President of the auto-proclaimed Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic.

Background

Mohamed Abdelaziz spent his youth in Morocco where his family still lives. He was one of the initial leaders in the mid-1970's of Polisario, a Sahrawi nationalist movement in Western Sahara. He became Secretary-General of the group in 1976, replacing Mahfoud Ali Beiba, who had taken the post as interim Secretary-General at the death of El-Ouali Mustapha Sayed. Since the annexation of Western Sahara by Morocco and Mauritania according to the Madrid Accords, he became the presidency of the auto-proclaimed Saharawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR), whose first constitution he was involved in drafting. He lives in exile in the Sahrawi refugee camps in Tindouf, Algeria.

Political profile

He is considered a secular nationalist and has steered the Polisario and the Sahrawi republic towards political compromise, after 17 years of war. In light of the new World Order, Polisario also abandoned its early Arab socialist orientation, in favor of a Western Sahara organized along liberal democratic lines, including expressly committing it to multi-party democracy and a market economy. But Polisario still remains modelled on One-party third world structures. He has consistently sought backing from Western states, notably the United States of America and the European Union, but so far with little success.

There is some criticism against him from within the Polisario for preventing reforms inside the movement, and for favouritism of his own tribe Rguibet, and insisting on a diplomatic course that has so far gained few concessions from Morocco, rather than re-launching the armed struggle favored by many within the movement.

He has condemned terrorism, insisting the Polisario's guerrilla war was to be a "clean struggle" (that is, not targeting private citizens' safety or property). He sent formal condolences to the afflicted governments after the terrorist attacks in New York City, Madrid, London and notably also to the Moroccan kingdom after the al-Qaida strikes in Casablanca.

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