Global Colors on Facebook Global Colors on Twitter Global Colors on You Tube
Home arrow world country guide arrow Western Sahara 
World Country Guide

Western Sahara

Western Sahara

The Research on this page was compiled by:
YOU can Help, volunteer to edit or update this page.


A mainly desert territory in north-west Africa, Western Sahara is the subject of a decades-long dispute between Morocco and the Algerian-backed Polisario Front.

The territory is phosphate-rich and believed to have offshore oil deposits. Most of it has been under Moroccan control since 1976.

Western Sahara fell under Spanish rule in 1884, becoming a Spanish province in 1934. Nationalism emerged in the 1960s, as nomadic Saharans, or Saharawis, settled in the region.

Polisario was set up on 10 May 1973 and established itself as the sole representative of the Saharan people. Some 100,000 refugees still live in Polisario's camps in Algeria.

Madrid Agreement

In October 1975 the International Court of Justice rejected territorial claims by Morocco and Mauritania. The court recognised the Saharawis' right to self-determination and Spain agreed to organise a referendum.

But in November 1975, Moroccan King Hassan II ordered a "Green March" of over 300,000 Moroccans into the territory. Spain backed down and negotiated a settlement with Morocco and Mauritania, known as the Madrid Agreement.

Signed on 14 November 1975, the deal partitioned the region. Morocco acquired two-thirds in the north and Mauritania the remaining third. Spain agreed to end colonial rule.

Polisario declared the Saharan Arab Democratic Republic (SADR) on 27 February 1976 and announced its first government on 4 March.

The current SADR president, Mohamed Abdelaziz, was elected Polisario secretary-general in August 1976.

In August 1978, one month after a coup, a new Mauritanian government signed a peace deal with Polisario and renounced all territorial claims.

Morocco moved to occupy areas allocated to Mauritania. Algeria in turn allowed refugees to settle in its southern town of Tindouf, where Polisario still has its main base.

Polisario led a guerrilla war against Moroccan forces until 1991.

Referendum

In April 1991 the UN established Minurso, the United Nations Mission for a Referendum in Western Sahara. Its brief was to implement a peace plan outlined in a 1990 Security Council resolution.

In September 1991 a UN-brokered ceasefire was declared.

The peace plan provided for a transition period, leading to a referendum in January 1992. Western Saharans would choose between independence and integration with Morocco.

Minurso was to total 1,000 civilian and 1,700 military personnel. Its brief was to monitor the ceasefire, the confinement of warring parties to designated areas and the exchange of prisoners.

While the ceasefire held, the mission was never fully deployed. Nor was the transition period ever completed. A key sticking point was an "identification process", to decide who was eligible to vote.

Identification was to be based on a census carried out by Spain in 1973. Polisario wanted to rule out Moroccans who settled in Western Sahara after the Green March.

In May 1996 the UN suspended the identification process and recalled most Minurso civilian staff. Military personnel stayed to oversee the truce.

Initial attempts to revive the process foundered over Morocco's worries that a referendum would not serve its interests.

Baker plan

Peace returned to the drawing board when UN special envoy James Baker mediated in talks between Polisario and Morocco in London, Lisbon and Houston in 1997, then in London again in 2000.

Agreements were reached on the release of POWs, a code of conduct for a referendum campaign, UN authority during a transition period - but not on voter eligibility. Further talks were held in Berlin and Geneva in 2000, but again ran into trouble.

In a new bid to break the deadlock, James Baker submitted a "Framework Agreement", known as the Third Way, in June 2001.Veteran Polisario leader Mohamed Abdelaziz

It provided for autonomy for Saharawis under Moroccan sovereignty, a referendum after a four-year transition period, and voting rights for Moroccan settlers resident in Western Sahara for over a year.

This formula was rejected by Polisario and Algeria. Then in July 2003, the UN adopted a compromise resolution proposing that Western Sahara become a semi-autonomous region of Morocco for a transition period of up to five years.

A referendum would then take place on independence, semi-autonomy or integration with Morocco.

This compromise was seen as addressing Moroccan concerns, in a bid to entice it to agree to a referendum.

Polisario signalled its readiness to accept, but Morocco rejected the plan, citing security concerns. Envoy James Baker resigned in June 2004 and the UN process remains deadlocked.

-BBC News


Western Sahara ( in: Africa ) Details and Statistics

Western Sahara

Local Time:

Weather:
National News:
Climate:
Hot, dry desert; rain is rare; cold offshore air currents produce fog and heavy dew

Population:
260,000 (estimate)

Capitol:
Laayoune

Area:
252,120 sq km (97,344 sq miles)

Major Language:
Arabic

Major religion:
Islam

Life Expectancy:

62 years (men), 66 years (women) (UN)

Monetary Unit:

Moroccan dirham

Main Exports:
n/a

GNI per capita:
n/a

Internet Domain:
n/a

Int. dialing Zone:
n/a


click title to collapse or expand
Poverty

Information Currently Unavailable

Human Rights

Information Currently Unavailable

Aids/Disease

Information Currently Unavailable

Environment

Literacy/Education

Information Currently Unavailable

Charitable Organizations


Information Currently Unavailable

Volunteer Opportunities

Information Currently Unavailable

Comments (0)Add Comment



Write comment

busy
Date added: 2008-11-21 17:43:54 Hits: 56
Last Update: 0000-00-00 00:00:00
Featured Project

52 Weeks
to change the world

featured_project_52-weeks_up.jpg

Follow along as we circumnavigate the globe creating grassroots aid.

buy_the_bead_v2.gif  

Media

video_wall.jpg Video Wall
From various projects  
media-module-photos.jpg Photo Galleries
our collection of images from around the world

About Us

 Who is Barton Brooks

Guerrilla Aid
Global Colors
Our Staff/Volunteers
Partners and Sponsors

Guerrilla Aid is a division of Global Colors - a registered 501(c)3 non-profit organization



Generated in 0.30472 Seconds