sábado, 28 de março de 2009

ISMUN interpelle la communauté internationale à faire respecter les droits de l’homme au Sahara Occidental


Genève, La Communauté internationale est interpellée en toute "urgence" car "elle ne peut rester, plus longtemps, ni silencieuse, ni passive devant l’injustice énorme perpétrée contre le peuple sahraoui et les conséquences économiques et sociales dévastatrices de l’occupation illégale de son pays par le Maroc", a déclaré l’ ISMUN devant la 10ème session du Conseil des droits de l’homme qui se tient à Genève du 02 au 27mars courant.

Intervenant au nom du mouvement international de la jeunesse et étudiants pour les Nation Unies (ISMUN), M. M’Hamed Mohamed Cheikh, a rappelé que plusieurs rapports confirment que la situation des droits de l’homme au Sahara Occidental s’est, davantage détériorée ces derniers temps, notamment depuis que le Maroc a accentué, encore plus, le bouclage des territoires, intensifié la répression et procédé à plusieurs arrestations arbitraires.

Les prisonniers politiques sahraouis ont, quant à eux, payé parfois de leur vie la répression systématique qui sévit depuis l’occupation de ce territoire par le Maroc. Plusieurs dizaines de prisonniers politiques sahraouis croupissent encore, sans inculpation ni jugement dans les prisons et centres secrets marocains tandis que les rescapés, d’entre eux vivent avec des séquelles et des maladies qu’ils traîneront toute leur vie, a-t-il ajouté.

La délégation ad-hoc du Parlement européen, qui a pu se rendre du 25 au 28 janvier 2009, à El Aaiun (Sahara Occidental) a demandé expressément l’Union européenne à travailler pour que la MINURSO puisse surveiller le respect des droits de l’homme au Sahara Occidental.

Human Rights Watch avait (HRW) avait recommandé dans son dernier rapport l’extension des prérogatives de la MINURSO à la surveillance des droits de l’homme au Sahara Occidental et à la protection des populations civiles", a indiqué M’Hamed au nom du Mouvement International des Jeunes et des Etudiants pour les Nations Unies (l’ISMUN).

Les graves atteintes aux droits de l’homme sont documentées par plusieurs organisations et institutions internationales dont le Haut Commissariat aux droits de l’homme qui, avait également souligné dans son rapport de 2006, que " toutes les violations des droits de l’homme commises au Sahara Occidental se nourrissent de la non application du droit fondamental qu’est celui de l’autodétermination", a-t-il ajouté.

Pour quelle raison le Haut Commissaire des Nations Unies pour les droits de l’homme n’a pas encore rendu public le rapport de sa mission au Sahara Occidental et pourquoi il ne veille pas à la mise en œuvre de ses recommandations, s’est interrogé le diplomate sahraoui.

"Les longues souffrances endurées par le peuple sahraoui par la faute de l’occupation coloniale marocaine ne doivent, en aucun cas, laisser indifférent, la communauté internationale face à ses responsabilités morales et légales par rapport au Sahara Occidental, dernière colonie en Afrique", a-t-il déploré.

sexta-feira, 27 de março de 2009

Irish MEP voices concerns about the life of three Saharawi hunger-striking prisoners of conscience




The Member of the Irish Parliament, Kathy Sinnott, also member of the Parliament’s Subcommittee on Human Rights, sent a letter to the Moroccan Ambassador to Ireland, expressing concerns about the serious state of three Saharawi hunger-striking prisoners of conscience in Moroccan prison Boulemharez.

Here is the complete text of the letter, of which UPES website received a copy:
---------------------

H.E. Mr. Anas Khales
Ambassador of Morocco
39 Raglan Road, Ballsbridge, Dublin 4


Dear Mr. Ambassador,

Currently, three Sahrawi political prisoners, Khallihanna Aboulhassan, Ali Salem Ablagh and Brahim Baryaz, all of them are university graduates, are staging an open-ended hunger strike in Boulemharez prison in Marrakech, Morocco, protesting about their miserable living conditions and that they be treated as prisoners of conscience. This has been going on since 12 February of this year, with little to no response whatsoever from the local or national authorities. The prisoners’ health is continuing to deteriorate very dangerously, even to loss of consciousness.

Reports coming from the prison are very alarming and require immediate action if serious injury and death is to be prevented. I would ask if His Excellency would contact the local prison and courts as well as any other Moroccan authorities necessary to address and cater to the hunger strikers’ demands. I also ask that you revert to me with more information on this desperate situation.

I look forward to your response.

Yours Sincerely,

Kathy Sinnott

MEP for Ireland South
Subcommittee on Human Rights

Office of Kathy Sinnott, MEP for Munster

Brussels Office: European Parliament, WIB 3M081, 60 Rue Wiertz, B-1047
Brussels, Belgium
Tel: +32 (0) 228 47692
Fax: +32 (0) 228 49692
Email: kathy.sinnott@europarl.europa.eu
Website: www.kathysinnott.ie

POLISARIO representative in Denmark received by the Danish Refugee Council (DRC)


POLISARIO Front’s Deputy Representative in Denmark, Abba Malainin, was received Wednesday by the Secretary General of the Danish Refugee Council (DRC), Mr. Andreas Kamm, according to POLISARIO Front representation in Denmark.

The Discussions focused on the humanitarian situation of the Sahrawi refugees, especially the last survey conducted in 2008 by Medecins du Monde (MDM) and WFP in coordination with UNHCR concluded that there was malnutrition in the Saharawi Refugee Camps, with 61 percent of the children and 66 percent of pregnant women suffering from anaemia (iron deficiency). The assessment also showed that 55 percent of all women are anaemic, with a possibility of overall micronutrient deficiencies in the entire population.

The Saharawi Diplomat briefed the Secretary General of the (DRC) about the recent reports published by the European Parliament Ad-hoc delegation, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch that unveiled the grave human rights violations perpetrated by the Moroccan Government in the Occupied Territories of Western Sahara.

Mr. Abba Malainin brought to the attention of his interlocutor the critical situation of the three Saharawi political prisoners, who have been going on an open hunger strike since February 12th, 2009 in Boulemharez prison in Marrakech,

The Danish Refugee Council (DRC) is a private, humanitarian organization covering all aspects of the refugee cause. The aim of the organisation is to protect refugees and internally displaced people (IDPs) against persecution and to promote durable solutions.

Danish Refugee Council is an umbrella organisation with 30 member organizations.

More than 30 people arrested during peaceful demonstration in El Aaiun


More than 30 people were arrested and dozens seriously injured during a brutal intervention of Moroccan forces against a peaceful demonstration started from Tuesday night to Wednesday in the occupied city of El Aaiun, demanding their inalienable right to self-determination.

The Moroccan forces of repression have brutally suppressed the demonstrators; arresting more than 30 people and wounding dozens, as for homes which were precisely under siege, according to a source from the Sahrawi Ministry of the occupied territories and Immigration.
According to a non-exhaustive assessment, the Moroccan forces of repression have arrested the Sahrawi citizens, Nguiya AL Hawass, Hayat Rgueibi (recently a victim of rape), Jamal Al Husseini, Snatu Sbai, Al Dagna Musawi and Dahbi Al Jamii, Zahra Al Mussawi, Zahra Rais, Lamat Zughmane and Afaf Mohamed Fadel.

Another demonstration took place in the occupied city of Smara, demanding the immediate withdrawal of the Moroccan occupation of Western Sahara and the release, without further delay, of the Sahrawi political prisoners still languish in Moroccan prisons, some of them are in a critical states of health because of the hunger strike, notably in Boulemharez prison (Marrakech).

Forty-fourth day of hunger strike by Sahrawi political prisoners in Marrakech prison



The Saharawi political prisoners in the Carcel Negra (Black jail) in occupied El Aaiun, expressed Wednesday their full solidarity with their compatriots on hunger strike since 43 days in Boulemharez prison (Southern Morocco), in a press release, a copy of which was received at SPS.

Sahrawi students Brahim Baryaz, Ali Salem Ablagh and Khalihnna Abul Hassan have conducted since February 12 an indefinite hunger strike in the prison of Marrakech to protest against their conditions of detention that do not respect international conventions that the Kingdom of Morocco has signed.

The President of the French Association of Friendship and Solidarity with the Peoples of Africa (AFASPA), Jean Paul Escoffier, notified Tuesday the King of Morocco regarding their situation in the prison of Marrakech.

In this regard, CODESA also appealed to the international human rights organizations to intervene urgently to save the lives of Sahrawi prisoners of conscience of a "certain death".


Sahrawi NGO expresses its solidarity with political prisoners on hunger strike in Bulemharez prison




The Saharawi Association of victims of grave violations of human rights committed by the Moroccan State (ASVDH) expressed Thursday its support and solidarity with the Sahrawi political prisoners on hunger strike for more than six weeks in the Moroccan prison of Bulemharez (Marrakech).

ASVDH has urged Moroccan authorities to reply as soon as possible to the legitimate claims of those prisoners, to "save their lives from certain death," the association said.

In this regard, the association holds the Moroccan authorities "responsible for the consequences that may result from this hunger strike which threatens lives of the political prisoners, arrested for their political opinions in favour of self-determination of the Saharawi people ".

Finally, ASVDH launched a call to international organizations of human rights to put pressure on Morocco for the release of Saharawi political prisoners which still languish in Moroccan prisons.

OMCT is concerned by the deteriorating situation of human rights in Western Sahar




The President of the World Organization against Torture (OMCT), Eric Sottas expressed "deep concern" over the deteriorating human rights situation in the occupied territories of Western Sahara, specifying "torture can not be in any way legitimate.”

Mr. Sottas speaking on the Sahrawi National Radio, in an exclusive statement to its program "freemen behind bars" condemned torture and chases perpetrated by the Moroccan authorities against the Saharawi Human Rights Defenders in the Saharawi territories under the Moroccan occupation.

He also indicated that he follows with great attention the situation of human rights in Western Sahara, adding that his organization is awaiting the response to a request to the Moroccan authorities for a visit to the region.

"We are awaiting a response and we hope to be able soon to visit the region, and if the European delegation waited more than 3 years to receive approval, we hope for it, as soon as possible.”

Regarding the case of the young Saharawi, Hayat Rgueibi, lately raped by Moroccan police, the president of OMCT has condemned the inhuman and criminal act that occurred most recently in the city of occupied El Aaiun.


Shipping companies desist from Western Sahara trade


wsrw

A group of three Norwegian shipping companies have stated that they desist from future assignments in Western Sahara.

Illustration photo above shows bagged fishmeal being loaded at the El Aaiun harbour, November 2008. The vessels are not related to the 3 companies mentioned in this article.

The Norwegian Support Committee for Western Sahara discovered recently that the Norwegian owned vessel "Kine" had visited Western Sahara. The vessel transported 2227 tonnes of bagged fishmeal from the occupied territory.

The ship is owned and managed by the Norwegian companies Vaagebulk IV, Vaage Shipmanagement AS and Wagle Chartering.

The three shipping companies told the Norwegian Support Committee for Western Sahara that they were not aware of the fact that the shipment had been done at all.

Such shipments are in violations of the recommendations of the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

According to information that the three companies have provided to the Support Committe, "Kine" arrived El Aaiun harbour in Western Sahara on 7 August, and started loading the fishmeal the following day. On 11 August, the ship had loaded the 2227 tonnes, which were to be transported to the importer Elagro SIA in Latvia.

The fishmeal was produced by the Moroccan company KB Fish.

"We do not want our vessels to be used in Western Sahara", confirmed Mr. Biørn Borge, CEO of Wagle Chartering, on behalf of his company and of the companies Vaagebulk IV and Vaage Shipmanagement AS.

At the time the vessel carried out its transport, she was chartered by the Dutch firm Hudig & Veder. Mr. Borge said they will convey their position to the Dutch company.

They furthermore state that they will state their position on Western Sahara trade once they chart out their vessels to other companies in the future.

Last week, the Norwegian shipping company Atlantic RTI / Fearnley Finans said that they too want to avoid such trade in the future, by introducing a Western Sahara ban in its future contracts.


terça-feira, 24 de março de 2009

La vie trois prisonniers politiques sahraouis en péril après plus de 40 jours de grève de la faim à Boulemharez


El Aaiun (territoires occupés), L’état de santé des trois prisonniers politiques sahraouis incarcérés à la prison de Boulemharez (Marrakech) mènent depuis le 12 février dernier, une grève de la faim, se trouve dans un "état critiques", selon des sources judicaires sur place.

Les trois prisonniers politiques sahraouis, khalihnna Aboulhassan, Bariaz Brahim et Ablagh Ali Salem mènent depuis plus de 40 jours une grève de la faim en protestation contre les conditions de vie inhumaines dans cette prison, après le rejet de leurs doléances par l’administration pénitentiaire.

Le prisonnier politique sahraoui, Khalihnna Aboulhassan, licencié à la faculté de lettres à la sociologie (Université Kaddi Ayyad Marrakech (Maroc), a été arrêté le 13 avril 2008 à l’intérieur d’une station de voyage à Marrakech.

Les deux autres Bariaz Brahim et Ablagh Ali Salem, sont licenciés à la faculté de droit en Sciences Politiques (Université Kaddi Ayyad Marrakech. Ils sont également étudiants et chercheurs en Master à l’Université Hassan1 Settat (Maroc).

Ils ont été arrêtés le 13 décembre derniers à Goulimim, en raison de leur participation à une manifestation pacifique réclamant le droit du peuple sahraoui à l’autodétermination organisée dans cette ville située au sud du Maroc et peuplée majoritairement par les Sahraouis.

Les prisonniers politiques sahraouis à la prison de Tiznit avaient annoncé, la semaine dernière une grève de la faim en signe de solidarité avec leurs compatriotes à la prison de Boulemharez, en grève de la faim depuis un mois.

Par ailleurs, les prisonniers politiques sahraouis à la Carcel negra d’El Aaiun observeront à partir de mercredi prochain une grève illimitée en guise de solidarité avec leurs confrères à la prison de Boulemharez, qui se trouvent dans un "état critique" en raison de la négligence des autorités pénitentiaires de leurs demandes légitimes, a rapporté l’ASVDH.

Pour sa part, l’Association pour la protection des prisonniers sahraouis, a lancé un appel à la communauté internationale, et en particulier la campagne internationale pour la libération des prisonniers politiques sahraouis à exercer plus de pression sur le Maroc pour la libération immédiate et inconditionnelle de ces prisonniers, afin d’éviter une "catastrophe humanitaire".

Les femmes du parti démocratique suédois appellent le Gouvernement à reconnaitre la RASD


Stockholm, Le Congrès des femmes du Parti démocratique suédois a adopté dimanche une résolution dans laquelle, il appelle le Gouvernement de la Suède à reconnaitre la République arabe sahraouie démocratique (RASD).

La résolution appelle également la Suède, qui assumera la présidence tournante de l’Union européenne durant le deuxième semestre de 2009, à ‘’ jouer un rôle capital dans la recherche d’une solution pacifique juste et durable du conflit du Sahara Occidental’’.

Les femmes du parti démocratique suédois ont regretté que le Maroc persiste dans son refus de se conformer à la légalité internationale, en dépit des résolutions onusiennes, appelant à permettre au peuple sahraoui d’exercer librement son droit à l’autodétermination.

Des copies de cette résolution ont été adressées au ministère des AE de la Suède, au Parlement et à l’Union européenne, afin de reconnaitre le droit à l'indépendance de la dernière colonie en Afrique, occupée illégalement par le Maroc depuis plus de 34 ans, après le retrait de l’Espagne.

Ont pris part à ce Congrès une délégation sahraouie comprenant la Secrétaire générale de l’UNFS, Fatma Elmahdi et Brahim Mokhtar, représentant du Front Polisario en Suède, qui ont informé la présence des derniers développements de la question du Sahara Occidental.

Le Polisario dénonce l’alignement de Paris à la proposition marocaine ‘‘d’autonomie’’ au Sahara Occidental


Chahid El Hafed, Le ministre des affaires étrangères, Mohamed Salem Ould-Salek a déclaré, dimanche, que le Front Polisario et le Gouvernement de la RASD dénoncent, une fois de plus "l’alignement aveugle de Paris à la politique coloniale et annexionniste du Maroc, notamment la proposition marocaine d’autonomie comme solution au conflit du Sahara occidental. ’’

Cette déclaration intervient en réaction aux déclarations du MAE français, Bernard Kouchner, publiées par Jeune Afrique et reprises par l’agence marocaine, MAP, selon lesquelles, il loue le projet marocain d’autonomie et essaie d’impliquer l’Algérie dans le conflit du Sahara Occidental qui oppose le Maroc au Front Polisario.

‘’Au moment où une délégation officielle du Parlement Européen jette la lumière sur les crimes et abus du Maroc dans les territoires occupes du Sahara occidental, les déclarations du MAE de la France, ‘’pays des libertés’’ viennent pour conforter le Gouvernement marocain dans sa politique de fait accompli colonial et de répression au Sahara occidental’’, a estimé le ministre sahraoui des AE.

M. Ould-Salek s’est étonné de voir, Bernard Kouchner, grand défenseur des droits humains, préférer de suivre la politique d’impunité du Maroc en matière des droits humains au Sahara occidental.

‘’Cette attitude étrange de la France, membre permanent du Conseil de sécurité, fait d’elle le seul pays qui soutient inconditionnellement le Maroc dans ses reniement inacceptables de ses engagements pris devant la communauté internationale pour l’organisation d’un référendum d’autodétermination, seul moyen à permettre au peuple sahraoui de disposer démocratiquement de son destin’’, a-t-il martelé.

Enfin le ministre de la diplomatie sahraouie a considéré sincèrement que la France peut et doit jouer ‘’un rôle positif’' devant contribuer à l’avènement de la paix, la stabilité et de coopération dans la région du Maghreb, a conclut la déclaration.

Une importante délégation Basque clôture sa visite aux camps de réfugiés sahraouis


Chahid El Hafed, Une importante délégation basque, conduite par le président de l’intergroupe parlementaire de solidarité avec le peuple sahraoui, aux pays basque, Xomin a clôturé dimanche sa visite de trois jours dans les camps des réfugiés sahraouis par un déjeuner offert en son honneur par le membre du Secrétariat national (SN), coordinateur avec la Minurso, M’hamed Khadad à la Présidence de la République.

La visite des représentants des institutions, des mairies et des municipalités des pays basques à la RASD, s’inscrit dans le cadre de la consolidation des relations de coopération bilatérales entre le peuple basque et le peuple sahraoui, selon une source proche de la délégation.

La délégation qui comprend également des représentants des ONGs, Egoa, Euskal, Fondoa, Mundubat finançant des projets dans les camps de réfugiés sahraouis, a pu rencontrer durant son séjour dans les camps de réfugiés, des membres du SN DU Front Polisario et du Gouvernement de la RASD.

Une délégation de l’Union des femmes reçue par des dirigeants des partis suédois


Stockholm, Une délégation dirigée par la Secrétaire générale de l'Union générale des femmes sahraouies (UNFS), Fatima Mahdi se trouve en visite de travail de quelques jours en Suède, à l’invitation du Parti social-démocrate suédoise, a-t-on appris de source proche de la délégation.

La délégation accompagnée du représentant du Front Polisario en Suède, Ibrahim Mokhtar a été reçue par Mme Carin Jamtin, ancien ministre chargé des questions financière à Stockholm. Ensuite la délégation a été reçue également au siège du Parlement par des membres du parlement et du Parti socialiste suédois, a-t-on ajouté.

Les discutions ont porté sur les derniers développements de la question du Sahara Occidental et la situation humanitaire des réfugiés sahraouis, à la lumière de la crise financière, mettant l’accent sur la nécessité d’une action commune entre les femmes sahraouies et les sympathisante du parti socialiste suédois.

Pour leur part, les membres du Parlement et du parti socialiste suédois ont réaffirmé leur soutien et leur engagement à renforcer les liens communs de coopérations entre l’UNFS et les femmes du parti socialiste suédois, ainsi que leur soutien à la marche internationale contre le mur de la honte qui se tiendra en avril prochain dans les camps de réfugiés sahraouis.

D’autre part la jeunesse du parti socialiste suédois à la ville de Stockholm a animé une conférence autour des derniers développements de la question du Sahara Occidental et la manière de soutenir les jeunes sahraouis dans l’attente d’une prompte solution juste et durable au conflit.

Le représentant adjoint du Front POLISARIO reçu au siège du parti socialiste danois


Copenhague (Danemark), Le représentant adjoint du Front POLISARIO au Danemark, Abba Malainin, a été reçu vendredi au siège du Parti socialiste (SF) par le membre du Comité international, Serdal Benli, et la secrétaire internationale, Inge Duus Hjortlund, selon la représentation du Front POLISARIO à Copenhague.

L’entretien a eu trait au derniers développements de la question du Sahara occidental, la dernière colonie en Afrique et aux récents rapports publiés par la délégation ad hoc du Parlement européen, Amnesty International et Human Rights Watch révélant les graves violations des droits humains dans les territoires occupés par le Maroc, a ajouté la même source.

Le diplomate sahraoui a informé ses interlocuteurs de la dernière visite du nouvel envoyé personnel de l'ONU pour le Sahara occidental, M. Christopher Ross dans la région pour la relance des négociations entre le Front POLISARIO et le Maroc devant trouver une solution politique au conflit du Sahara occidental qui respecte le droit du peuple sahraoui à l'autodétermination, tel que défini par le Conseil de sécurité dans ses différentes résolutions.

Les discutions ont également porté sur l'illégalité d’inclure le Sahara occidental dans tout accord signé entre l'UE et le Maroc, alors que ce territoire est considéré par l'ONU en tant que territoire non autonome, auquel l'ONU ne reconnaît pas la souveraineté du Maroc.

La députée du SF, Mme Margrete Auken avait indiqué au cours des négociations UE-Maroc, sur l'accord de pêche 2006, que "son pays ne peut, d'une part critiquer l’occupation illégale du Sahara Occidental par le Maroc et en même temps, signer un accord de pêche avec le Maroc, qui dénie totalement les droits des Sahraouis à jouir de leurs propres ressources ", rappelle-t-on.

Le Parti socialiste populaire danois est un important parti de l'opposition, au Danemark et occupe 23 sièges des 179 sièges du Parlement (Folketing).

domingo, 22 de março de 2009

UN send mission to assess Sahrawi refugees situation


The United Nations has launched a mission to assess the Western Sahara refugees situation in Algeria following reports of malnutrition and rapidly deteriorating humanitarian crisis, the UN refugees agency has announced.

According to the UN High Commission for Refugees spokesperson, Ron Redmond, a three day mission resuming today aims to see first-hand the situation in the sites and to assess the overall conditions of the refugees in the camps.

Mr Redmond said in the last survey conducted in 2008, 61 percent of the children and 66 percent of pregnant women in the camps were suffering from anaemia, a situation reported to be critical by the World Food Programme.

The mission which is comprising of the UNHCR, WFP and other international aid agencies is also expected decide on whether to include additional foodstuffs with high nutritional value in the food assistance, specifically targeted to children, pregnant and lactating mothers.

The UN said in the last five years the donor funding has been unreliable and in 2008, UNHCR only received 39 percent of its budget, and both the agency and WFP still need additional funding for 2009.

Sahrawi refugees started flocking in Algeria in the mid-seventies fleeing the rebellion between the Polisario Front and Moroccan government over the status of Western Sahara which has been dragging for decades since Morocco annexed Western Sahara in the 1970’s.

The mission is expected to visit two of four refugee camps and will meet with beneficiaries, refugee leaders and Algerian authorities.

The UNHCR said refugees have been living in four deserted camps in south-west Algeria since the mid-seventies, with aid declining every year.

Since 1991, the UN mission in Western Sahara (MINURSO) has been tasked with monitoring the ceasefire between the two parties and organising a long-stalled referendum on self-determination.

WFP and UNHCR have been working very closely together to highlight the plight of the refugees through joint donor visits and joint assessment missions.

Shipping company introduces Western Sahara ban





The Norwegian Council for Africa wrote in February about the shipping company Atlantic RTI which transported fish from occupied Western Sahara. The company now says they will prevent their vessels from being used for such purposes in the future.


Norwegian Council for Africa
20 March 2009

Last Christmas, the Norwegian Council for Africa photographed Atlantic’s vessel ‘Remora 1’. The ship was docked in the harbour of Dakhla in occupied Western Sahara, on its way to transport fish in violation of the recommendations of the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Trade in fish from Western Sahara supports the Moroccan occupation and settlement policy in Western Sahara. The Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs asks Norwegian companies to stay out of the territory.

The chairman of Atlantic RTI, Mr. Johan Lønnmark Werner, told the Norwegian Council for Africa that they disliked that the vessel had been used for such purposes, and that they had not accepted it had they had been in control over the vessel when the transport took place.

Now, Atlantic RTI is going even a step further in order to prevent such episodes in the future.

Mr. Edvard B. Aaby in Atlantic’s partner Fearnley Finans Shipping, in correspondence with the Norwegian Support Committee for Western Sahara, confirms that the shipping company in future contracts will specify that their vessels are not going to carry out such shipments from Western Sahara.

This precision will be made in the contracts next time Atlantic RTI enters a charterparty, according to the company. Over the last years, several Norwegian shipping companies have stated that they do not want their vessels to visit ports in occupied Western Sahara, but none of the companies have taken such specific measures.

”Atlantic deserves to be praised for this”, said Ronny Hansen, chairman of the Norwegian Support Committee for Western Sahara.

Hansen said that the Support Committee has been in contact with several shipping companies that dislike that their vessels have been used in Western Sahara.

”The challenge has always been that the companies claim that they have limited possibilities to stop such transports, since the vessels are being chartered out. Atlantic now shows that it is fully possible for a shipping company to stop such involvement, even when their vessels are under charter. They really show that they are a responsible company standing on solid ethical grounds”, said Hansen.

When Remora 1 carried out the transport, she was chartered out to the Dutch bank HBU.

The Norwegian Support Committee for Western Sahara and their Dutch sister organisation have today made contact with the bank asking them to follow Atlantic’s example.

The Support Committee and Atlantic have been in continuous contact since the Norwegian Council for Africa wrote about the Atlantic transport in February.

Island Oil fails in geography




The Irish oil company Island Oil and Gas, which illegally explores for oil in occupied Western Sahara, has produced new maps.


Island Oil and Gas, a company which explores for oil for an occupying power on occupied land, in violation of the United Nations opinion in 2002, has published new maps of Western Sahara on their homepages.

The new maps, define Western Sahara as part of Morocco.

No state in the world recognises Morocco's claims to Western Sahara. Those claims have even been rejected by the International Court of Justice.

The unethical company, based in Dublin, is financially and politically supporting the illegal occupation, in the disregard of the wishes of the Sahrawi people.

Western Sahara Resource Watch demands the company's immediate withdrawal from the occupied country.

Denounced plundering to UN Human Rights Council





France Libertés: Fondation Danielle Mitterrand - an NGO with special consultative status in the Human Rights Council - has submitted a written statement to the council denouncing the plundering of Western Sahara.



"These injustices, perpetrated against the will and interest of the Sahrawi people and to their detriment, continue amidst the total indifference of the international community", wrote France Libertés - Fondation Danielle Mitterrand to the UN Human Rights Council on 12 February 2009.

The organisation denounced that the illegal exploitation of Western Sahara's natural resources by Morocco is continuing to this day. France Libertés visited the occupied territories of Western Sahara in 2002, and did a study on the number of phospahte workers who had been marginalised from the industry since the occupation began in 1975. They concluded that Sahrawis are marginalised from the industries in the occupied country.



PROMOTION AND PROTECTION OF ALL HUMAN RIGHTS, CIVIL, POLITICAL, ECONOMIC, SOCIAL AND CULTURAL RIGHTS, INCLUDING THE RIGHT TO DEVELOPMENT

Written statement* submitted by France Libertés: Fondation Danielle Mitterrand, a non-governmental organization in special consultative status
The Secretary-General has received the following written statement which is circulated in accordance with Economic and Social Council resolution 1996/31.
[12 February 2009]


Natural Resource Pillage in Western Sahara

The issue of safeguarding natural resources is one of the central problems for non-autonomous peoples, since occupation involves land dispossession and therefore the exploitation of resources for the benefit of a third State is a corollary of dispossession.

Western Sahara since 1963 is included among the non self-governing territories, according to Chapter XI of the United Nations Charter. A flagrant example of failed decolonisation.
Several elements are at the root of this failure.

In 1975 the withdrawal of Spain from her last colony triggered a process of illegal partitioning of the territory by Morocco and Mauritania (Madrid Accords), followed by a war (the Green March) fought between the Sahrawi people and Morocco, which led to Morocco’s illegal occupation of the territory. Despite the cease-fire signed in 1991 under United Nations auspices, and the peace plan aimed at settling the dispute, as well as all the later initiatives, no definitive settlement has yet been reached.
In 1974 the United Nations General Assembly passed Resolution 3292, through which it requested the International Court of Justice for an advisory opinion on the relations between Western Sahara, on the one hand, and the Kingdom of Morocco and the Mauritanian entity, on the other. The advisory opinion pronounced in October 1975 established clearly in paragraph 162 that the territory in question could not be considered a terra nullius , and further that the historical ties of Morocco and the Mauritanian entity with this territory and its population in no way granted those two countries any sovereignty rights over the land. The Court further stated that the historical ties that existed – ties of vassalage – could not be construed in any way as limiting the rights of the Sahrawi people over the territory. The Court recommended that the decolonisation of Western Sahara should continue pursuant to Resolution 1514 (XV). The Green March undoubtedly constituted a breach of Article 2 of the United Nations Charter (peaceful settlement of disputes).

Let us also mention the Madrid Accords, agreed upon by Spain, Morocco and Mauritania in November 1975, which established a tripartite administration without the agreement either of the Sahrawi people or of the United Nations. The Madrid Accords are manifestly null and void. As Hans Korrell, a legal expert and former UN Under-Secretary-General for Legal Affairs, declared: Spain had no right to transfer the status of administrative power to anyone at all; and, in any case, these Accords had no power to affect the status of Western Sahara as a non-autonomous territory. As a result, Morocco’s occupation is a violation of international law. Further evidence is provided by the fact that Morocco does not appear as the administrative power of Western Sahara in the list of non self-governing territories recognized by the United Nations.

The Department of Legal Affairs has further stated that “exploitation and pillage of marine resources and other natural resources of colonial or non self-governing by foreign economic interests, in violation of the relevant UN resolutions, jeopardizes the integrity and prosperity of such territories.” And further: “any administrative power that deprives the colonised peoples of non self-governing of the exercise of their legitimate rights over natural resources ... violates the obligations incumbent upon them pursuant to the United Nations Charter.” In relation to the exploitation of the natural resources of a non-autonomous territory, Hans Korrell stressed that such exploitation is not allowed unless it is for the benefit of the people inhabiting the territory, and unless it is done on their behalf and in consultation with their representatives. Further, referring to existing contracts between Morocco and the US firm Kerr McGee and the French TotalFinaElf on prospecting in newly discovered oil reserves off the coast, Korrell declared: “Despite the fact that these contracts signed with foreign companies are not in themselves illegal, we must conclude that, if any prospecting or exploitation activities are to be undertaken against the interests and will of the Sahrawi people, then they would be clearly in violation of international law as applicable to activities pertaining to natural resource exploitation in non self-governing.”

As a result of the criticism and doubts raised as to the legitimacy of the operation, the Norwegian firm TGS-Nopec (which had been hired by Kerr-McGee and TotalFinaElf for the prospecting) withdrew from the project. But that did not stop the operation: when Kerr-McGee’s activities were banned by the Norwegian Government, the operation was taken over by its partner Kosmos Energy, based in Dallas and granted a prospecting licence by the Moroccan State oil company, ONHYM, which also hired the Norwegian company Fugro-Geoteam to carry out the prospecting. And this was done using the largest vessel of its kind, built last year, supported by several shuttle vessels delivering supplies.

The pillage of the Sahrawi people’s natural resources extends, however, to several other fields, such as fishing, phosphate exports, and even including the sale of its sand to construction firms in the Canary Islands or to be used in the creation of beaches in the volcanic areas of Madeira. The last shipment occurred on 31 May 2008 and consisted of 2800 tons of sand used for the reconstruction of Caheta beach which had been devastated by a hurricane.

The issue of fishing deserves a more in depth study, since it is an example of the involvement of foreign States in the pillage of Western Sahara’s natural resources. The European Union has signed an unfair agreement with Morocco for fishing activities in Sahrawi territorial waters: of the 1,200,000 tons of fish caught yearly by European Union industrial fishing off the African coasts, about 900,000 tons come from the coasts off Western Sahara. The volume of this market is worth more than 1,000 million Euros: these profits strengthen the occupier and benefit those who fish illegally off the Sahrawi coast.

This deplorable situation is further aggravated by the ambiguity that persists around the issue of the illegality of the presence of Morocco in Western Sahara, and Morocco’s domination over its territorial waters. The ambiguity is based on a crucial point: the definition of the limits of Morocco’s territorial waters. In its negotiations with Morocco on fishing in waters legally pertaining to Western Sahara, the European Union is co-responsible internationally for the illegal exploitation of the natural resources of a still non-autonomous territory. Thus, once the new State will finally have achieved independence, it will be able to claim compensation, just like Namibia claimed compensation from those who had negotiated illegally with the Pretoria regime.

In addition to the pillage, one must also consider the consequences of a massive use of drift gillnets which endanger the conservation of marine species.

Since they are vital products for agriculture, phosphates are a resource greatly in demand in most of the world’s countries. The production in the Bou Craa mines, the exploitation of which began under Spanish occupation in 1970, today amounts to about 3 million tons, i.e. 10% of Morocco’s total production. The total contribution to that country’s national revenue has been considerable, for all the years since its occupation began. A conveyor belt, which is one of the biggest in the world, transports phosphates for over 100 km, all the way to El Ayoun harbour. There, the infrastructure was designed specifically for the shipment of phosphates, and mineral-transport vessels as well as high seas cargo-ships export this mineral to several countries in Europe and Asia.

A number of Non-Governmental Organizations have denounced this situation, time and again, over a long period ; they have also released the names of firms involved in the import of the mineral. Some companies, demonstrating their honesty, have provisionally suspended all phosphate imports; others have stated that these activities are totally legal according to international law, in their opinion; others still have replied that these trade activities benefit the Sahrawi people as well, whereas the situation is in fact the opposite, as was clearly documented by a mission report released in 2003 by France Libertés. Additionally, quite apart from the pillage of this extremely important resource, it is worth recalling that the majority of mineworkers was fired over the past years: today, of the 200 or so who still work in the mines, most have reported violation of their economic and social rights, systematic exclusion and marginalisation within the phosphate industry, as well as marked treatment inequalities between their conditions and those of Moroccan workers, including demotions and lack of opportunities for promotion.

A number of United Nations resolutions point to the fact that any phosphate extraction and trade activity in Western Sahara, spoliation of fishing resources off the coast of Western Sahara, or oil extraction are in violation of international law. Despite this, the situation persists. We can only conclude by stressing once more that these injustices, perpetrated against the will and interest of the Sahrawi people and to their detriment, continue amidst the total indifference of the international community.

Coop Stops Import of Occupation Tomatoes







For a few days more you will still find tomatoes from occupied Western Sahara on the vegetable counters of the Norwegian grocery store Coop. On Wednesday they stopped the controversial import. Norwatch, 11 March 2009.



By Erik Hagen
Read the story on Norwatch
11 March 2009


When you go to the vegetable counter in Coop supermarkets, you find fresh, tempting, plastic-wrapped tomatoes. The tomatoes are labelled with the name “Azura”, and on the packages it says that the country of origin is “Morocco”. But the label is lying.

Some of the tomatoes that Coop for months has marketed and sold in Norway have actually been cultivated in occupied Western Sahara – by Moroccan settlers. The Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs advises against such trade with Moroccan interests in Western Sahara.

All of this past autumn and winter Norwatch has been digging into the Norwegian import of vegetables from occupied Western Sahara. Coop first confirmed that they import from the area, and the trade has secretly been taking place all winter.

“Today we have informed our supplier that in the future we only want products that they can guarantee have been produced in Agadir,” Bjørn Kløvstad, communications director at Coop, wrote in an e-mail to Norwatch on Wednesday 11 March 2009.


Employs Settlers

The area where the tomato plantations are located, by the coastal town of Dakhla, covers an area of several square kilometres.

According to the Moroccan newspaper Le Matin, the new agricultural production employs all of 6000 people. The number of employees is expected to triple by 2020.

According to what Norwatch has learned, almost all of the employed are settlers who have moved into Western Sahara after the occupation. The new agricultural commitment is a part of Morocco’s strategy to settle the southern parts of Western Sahara. The Moroccan king is also supposed to have proprietary interest in the tomato industry in the occupied areas, according to the newspaper TelQuel.

Coop’s supplier of tomatoes, the French company Azura, is owned by a French-Moroccan family. The company has 36 greenhouse plantations in Agadir in Morocco and 2 in Dakhla in occupied Western Sahara. The company’s Dakhla plantations were started in 2006 and today cover an area of 76 hectares. According to Azura’s web pages, the city of Dakhla is located in “South Morocco”.


Azura’s French headquarters first confirmed to Norwatch that they export tomatoes to Norway, Sweden, Finland and Denmark but became silent when we sent further queries as to the exact place of origin, labelling of the tomatoes and customers in Norway. Norwatch has sent four enquiries to Azura’s public relations officer during the past 4 months; so far none of them has been answered. Norwatch therefore got in touch with three of the biggest importers of fruit and vegetables in Norway: ICA, Bama and Coop. Only Coop confirmed that they purchase from Azura’s plantations – including those in Western Sahara. ICA and Bama do not import tomatoes from Morocco.

“We have, in the light of your queries, checked the “composition” of the products we have received from this supplier, and it turns out that they have also produced on a small scale in Dakhla, imported it to Agadir – for resale to us,” Kløvstad confirmed to Norwatch on Wednesday.

He believes that the attention to the Western Sahara issue in Norway makes it unlikely that such import will continue in the future.


Pleased Peace Prize Winner

The Sahrawi winner of the Students’ Peace Prize for 2009, Rabab Amidane (to the right), is pleased to hear the news about Coop’s import stop.


After she received the Peace Prize in Trondheim in February for her human rights work, she has been travelling around Norway on a lecture tour and spoken about, among other things, all those Norwegian companies that participate in the plunder of Western Sahara’s natural resources.

On Wednesday Amidane took part in a Western Sahara demonstration in front of the Parliament in Oslo, arranged by, among others, all the political youth parties.


Opening for Customs Cheating

Norwatch has previously reported that Norway, through its EFTA collaboration, has entered into free trade agreements with the occupation powers Morocco and Israel. The agreements apply to goods produced within the two countries’ internationally recognized borders.

But this, nevertheless, does not prevent Moroccan and Israeli producers from selling products from occupied territory to the European markets. The EU has especially cracked down on the practice of importing from occupied Israeli areas. A series of European importers were caught red-handed in cheating with regard to the country of origin. In the period from 1 February to 30 June 2008 British customs authorities refused to accept 529 Israeli certificates of origin.

Norway’s EFTA agreement with Morocco could entail that Norwegian importers cheat with regard to customs duty to the Norwegian national treasury. Norwatch has previously written that it is impossible to know to what extent the customs authorities check the certificates of origin from Morocco/Western Sahara.

Norway imports close to 1 tonne of tomatoes from Morocco yearly. The customs duties for tomatoes in Norway vary throughout the year and are especially high during the summer half of the year, when Norwegian farmers produce tomatoes themselves. During this period Norway normally does not import any tomatoes from Morocco. In the winter, however, the customs duty is zero, no matter what country one wishes to import from.

In the in-between period in October the customs duty is relatively low. During the last 2 weeks of October there are no customs on the import of Moroccan tomatoes, whereas the duty for all other countries is 0,2 euros for 1 kg. The difference makes it possible for companies that import tomatoes from Western Sahara – but falsely label them as Moroccan – to get away with a cheaper tariff.

It is not known whether Norwegian importers have utilised such loopholes by falsely labelling Western Saharan products as Moroccan.

Norwatch has earlier reported that it is impossible to ascertain if the Norwegian customs service checks whether Israeli and Moroccan products actually stem from where it is claimed or whether they come from occupied territories.


Occupied

In 1975 Morocco and Mauretania entered into a secret agreement with the earlier colonial power Spain with regard to dividing Western Sahara in two. The northern part was to become the property of Morocco, and the southern part was to go to Mauretania. The agreement was in conflict with a series of UN resolutions that had demanded that the territory be decolonised. The International Court of Justice in The Hague had also concluded that the area belongs to the local inhabitants and not one of the neighbouring countries.

The area from which Coop has imported tomatoes was first occupied by Mauretania in 1975. The majority of the local inhabitants then fled from the area. When the Sahrawis in 1979 entered into a peace agreement with Mauretania, and Mauretania withdrew, Morocco promptly moved in.

“The General Assembly deplores greatly the deterioration of the situation after Western Sahara continues to be occupied by Morocco and that the occupation has been expanded to the territory that Mauretania has recently evacuated,” according to General Assembly Resolution 34/37 with regard to the area where the tomato plantations are located.

But international pressure never got much further than that. Especially France has supported Morocco’s occupation, both politically and militarily. And during the past few years the French-Moroccan tomato enterprise Azura has seen the possibilities in the occupied country.

Norwatch: Requested Military Help







Moroccan Navy was asked to support Fugro-Geoteam’s oil assignment outside occupied Western Sahara. This is shown by an internal Moroccan government document that Norwatch has obtained. Norwatch, 17 March 2009.



By Erik Hagen
Norwatch
17 March 2009

Fugro-Geoteam’s assignment in occupied Western Sahara is in all probability about to be concluded. The controversial assignment, which is being carried out for Moroccan authorities, was started at the beginning of January. If Morocco discovers the oil they are looking for, it is not very likely that Morocco will ever permit the Sahrawi people to go through with the referendum on the country’s future, as Morocco and the UN have previously promised.

Norwatch exposed the controversial assignment during the start-up at the beginning of January.

The Norwegian sailing was originally supposed to last 2 months but is now entering the 3rd month. The reason for the deferment could be technical problems on Fugro-Geoteam’s newly constructed seismic vessel.

In any case, there can not be much time left of the assignment. And as it approaches its end, Norwatch has obtained more information on the conditions for the project.

An internal document between the Moroccan Ministry of Fisheries and the Navy shows that the Navy in the coast city of Dakhla was asked to ensure that the Norwegian company’s operation would be carried out without problems.

“We count on your collaboration and assistance to make this operation successful,” it says in the letter sent to the colonel at the Navy base in Dakhla at the beginning of January this year.

The document refers to the name of the Norwegian company and a number of features of the vessel to be used in the occupied areas. Reference to the vessel sailing under Norwegian flag is not correct; the ship has since December sailed under a Caribbean flag. See the document below.

But there are other interesting facts in the document. Among other things it reveals the kind of seismic being carried out by the Norwegian company – that is, so-called 3D. In addition, it mentions the size of the area is to be explored: “an area of about 2000 sq. km. in the so-called Boujdour offshore block”.

This implies that Fugro-Geoteam’s employer, the privately owned oil company Kosmos Energy, has gotten a clearer idea as to where in the occupied country the oil may be found. Kosmos Energy’s huge block off Western Sahara is all of 43,998 sq. km. Fugro-Geoteam is now surveying a small twentieth part of the block.

The document says furthermore that the exploration is to start in January and last 60 days. The activities have been met by protests from the Sahrawis. The accompanying video shows Sahrawi demonstrations against Fugro-Geoteam both at the University in Agadir and at a small town in south Morocco.


Problems

But Fugro-Geoteam has met problems in carrying out the assignment within the planned 60 days.
As early as 11 February the harbour register in Las Palmas showed that Geo Caribbean was there for reparations. The ship was in port for a short 15 hours before leaving. In addition, they have now gone far beyond the time span originally planned for the assignment.

Today Geo Caribbean’s Faroese escort ship, Thor Omega, is on its way back to Las Palmas.
For some unknown reason, Thor Omega has during the past 24 hours sailed together with another ship, Island Senior.

Island Senior previously was a Thor Offshore vessel sailing under the name Thor Fish and was last year sold by Thor Offshore to a company on the Shetland Islands, Island Innovations Ltd. Thor Fish is still referred to on Thor Offshore’s web pages as if it were a part of its fleet.

The manager of Thor Offshore, Hans Andrias Joensen, told Norwatch today that he does not wish to either confirm or deny that Island Senior has worked as a part of Fugro-Geoteam’s assignment.

Sahrawis on Canaries demonstrating against oil search


Sahrawi refugees on the Canary Islands yesterday protested against the Norwegian oil search in occupied Western Sahara. They demanded that the project be stopped.


The Sahrawi group protested in front of Thor Omega, a Faroe Islands owned supply vessel that works for the Norwegian seismic survey company Fugro-Geoteam in Western Sahara. The vessel had docked at the harbour only few hours earlier, and visited the port briefly to load cargo, as the Sahrawis rushed down to the harbour to protest.

“Don’t steal our natural resources” shouted the protestors to the employees on board the vessel. They also demanded that Canary ports are not used as base for plundering of Western Sahara.

The companies involved in the Moroccan oil search in occupied Western Sahara have to this day refused to answer any question from Sahrawis, from the Western Sahara liberation movement or from Western Sahara Resource Watch.

The Norwegian-Faroese companies can make it impossible for the Sahrawis to have their legitimate independence. If Morocco finds oil in Western Sahara, they will probably never accept liberation of the neighbouring country that they occupied in 1975, to the protest of the UN.

“These are crucial days for the Sahrawi people. The entire UN peace process can be jeopardized due to this oil industry. The Sahrawis are extremely frustrated over the lack of response from the international community in the Moroccan oil search in Western Sahara”, said Sergio Ramirez, of Western Sahara Resource Watch.

Ramirez attended the demonstration in Las Palmas, which made the headlines on Faroese national TV last night.

”It is an absolute scandal that the international oil industry is cooperating with an occupying powers military forces in carrying out illegal oil hunt on occupied land. We demand that this project be immediately stopped, and the intervention from Norwegian, Danish and American governments”, said Ramirez.

The company with the exploration licence is Kosmos Energy from Texas. The Norwegian and Faroese companies Fugro-Geoteam and Thor Offshore carry out the seismic surveys.

Thousands of Sahrawi refugees are living on the Canary Islands. There have also been demonstrations in Sahrawi communities in Morocco.

Yesterday the Norwegian news service Norwatch discovered that Fugro-Geoteam might have received support from the Moroccan navy during the explorations, that are expected to probably finish later this month.