British MP’s “running out of patience” on Western Sahara situation


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Flag of the United Kingdom

Today in London, to mark the anniversary of the International Court of Justice’s (ICJ) ruling on Western Sahara’s right to self determination, a Saharawi Olympic athlete ran around Parliament Square thirty-four times: once for each year that the ruling has been ignored by Morocco. The runner, Salah Hmatou Amaidan, was joined for a lap by various MP’s, academics and campaigners who were there also to express their concern for the safety of seven prominent human rights activists arrested in Casablanca last week.

The advocates belong to a number of human rights organizations and civil society groups and have long track records of monitoring of and reporting on human rights violations in Western Sahara. They were driven away by security forces after returning from a visit to the refugee camps in the Algerian desert where 165,000 Saharawi’s have lived for over three decades. Neither their location nor the reason for their detention has been disclosed. Human rights organisations, including Amnesty International, have expressed serious concerns about this latest incident in a country where over 500 Saharawi activists have ‘disappeared’.

Amaidan, 26, who regularly trains with British Olympic runner, Paula Radcliffe, in France where he lives in exile, has won gold medals in Africa and Europe and is in London to promote the ‘Running the Sahara’ marathon that takes place in the refugee camps next February. After his run around Parliament Square Amaidan then ran to the Moroccan Embassy where he delivered a letter calling on Morocco to disclose the exact place of detention of the seven activists and to provide them with immediate access to their families, lawyers and any medical attention they might require. The letter was signed by eight Members of Parliament including Jeremy Corbyn MP (Chair of the APPG on Western Sahara), human rights campaigners (including Ruth Tanner, Campaigns Director at War on Want) and academics (including Professor Isabel Santaolalla). A separate letter was also published in the Guardian newspaper.

Exactly thirty-four years after the ICJ stated that the facts did ‘not establish any tie of territorial sovereignty between the territory of Western Sahara and the Kingdom of Morocco’ and upheld UN resolution 1541 on the right of the Saharwi to self-determination, Western Sahara remains occupied. Over 100 further UN resolutions have been passed but not enforced. In the meantime Saharawi’s human rights are trampled. Those who stand-up against this repression – people like Ahmed Alansari, Brahim Dahane, Yahdih Ettarouzi, Saleh Labihi, Dakja Lashgar, Rachid Sghir and Ali Salem Tamek – risk detention, torture and or even being ‘disappeared’ themselves.

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Stefan Simanowitz
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A London-based writer, broadcaster and journalist, Stefan Simanowitz writes for publications in the UK and around the world including the: Guardian, Independent, Financial Times, Washington Times, Global Post, Huffington Post, New Statesman, In These Times, New Internationalist, Prospect, Lancet, Salon.com, Contemporary Review, Mail & Guardian. He has a background in policy, political strategy and international human rights law and has worked for the European Commission, Liberty and the ANC during South Africa’s first democratic election campaign. He has reported from mass graves in Somaliland and Indonesia, prisons in Cameroon and South Africa, refugee camps in the Sahara desert and he writes on all aspects of global politics. He also has an interest in culture and travel, writing reviews on music, literature, film and theatre and taking photographs to accompany his reviews and reportage.
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