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Moroccan Settlers in Western Sahara: Colonists or Fifth Column?

in The Arab World Geographer 15(2), Summer 2012: 95-126

Since assuming control of the former Spanish Sahara in 1976, Morocco has encouraged between 200 000 and 300 000 of its citizens to settle there. As a result of this settlement campaign, combined with the mass exodus of nearly half of the indigenous Sahrawi population in the immediate aftermath of Rabat’s 1975 invasion, Moroccan settlers now constitute the majority population in occupied Western Sahara. Moroccan-occupied Western Sahara continually posts some of the highest voter turnouts in Moroccan elections; however, Rabat rejected a 2003 UN peace proposal that would have allowed both Moroccan settlers and native Western Saharans to vote for independence or formal union with Morocco in a final status referendum. The Western Saharan independence movement’s acceptance of this proposal and, more importantly, Morocco’s rejection of it, despite the clear demographic hegemony of Moroccan settlers in the territory, has led observers to speculate as to the rationale that drove Morocco to reject the UN plan. This article argues that a possible factor—largely unknown elsewhere, but likely very well understood by Moroccan authorities—is the ethnic composition of the settler population, which may be predominantly Sahrawi. To establish this as a tenable hypothesis, the author first backgrounds the Western Sahara conflict and the basic parameters of its ethno-political geography, then sketches the broad patterns of Moroccan settlement in occupied Western Sahara and pays closer attention to the ethnic aspects of Rabat’s settlement drive. Finally, the article examines the role of Moroccan settlers in the Western Sahara peace process during the 1990s and after, leading up to Morocco’s rejection of the 2003 UN plan.

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The dynamics of repression and resistance : Sahrawi nationalist activism in the Moroccan occupied Western Sahara

in Pambazuka News, Issue 551 (Special Issue: “Western Sahara’s struggle for freedom” edited by Konstantina Isidoros), 6 October 2011), http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/features/76904 (This paper was originally presented at the 2008 annual meeting of the International Studies Association in San Francisco.)

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Book review: Historical Dictionary of Western Sahara, Third Edition by Anthony Pazzanita

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Cómo los EE. UU. y Marruecos se apoderaron del Sáhara Español

En noviembre pasado [2006] se cumplieron 30 años de la crisis del Sáhara, desencadena cuando Marruecos presionó con éxito a Madrid, en el otoño de 1975, para expulsarlo de su colonia en el desierto. A pesar de los desmentidos de Estados Unidos, documentos secretos desclasificados revelan que el éxito del rey Hassan II fue posible gracias a la intervención de EE.UU.

Translation by Luis Portillo.

Original in English: http://mondediplo.com/2006/01/12asahara

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Algeria and the Western Sahara Dispute

Since the outbreak of hostilities between Morocco and the Western Saharan nationalists of the Frente Popular de Liberación de Saguía el Hamra y Río de Oro (Polisario) in late 1975, Algeria has been one of the most important actors in that conflict. While Algeria maintains no territorial claim on Western Sahara, it has consistently supported Polisario’s drive for self-determination diplomatically, militarily, financially and morally. With only slight aberrations in its Western Sahara policy, Algeria’s position in the Western Sahara conflict, as Polisario’s most important backer, will likely hold the same general shape it has for over thirty years. There is no doubt, then, that understanding Algeria’s role in the Western Sahara conflict is necessary for a complete historical appreciation of this neglected international issue and is also key to unlocking the peace process, which has stagnated over the last ten years.

in Maghreb Center Journal, Number 1, Spring/Summer 2010: 14p.

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U.S. Lawmakers Support Illegal Annexation

In yet another assault on fundamental principles of international law, a bipartisan majority of the Senate has gone on record calling on the United States to endorse Morocco’s illegal annexation of Western Sahara, the former Spanish colony invaded by Moroccan forces in 1975 on the verge of its independence. In doing so, the Senate is pressuring the Obama administration to go against a series of UN Security Council resolutions, a landmark decision of the International Court of Justice, and the position of the African Union and most of the United States’ closest European allies.

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Legal analysis of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) Advisory Opinion on Western Sahara

Full citation: Jacob Mundy, “Legal analysis of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) Advisory Opinion on Western Sahara”, in Multilateralism and International Law with Western Sahara as a Case Study, Neville Botha, Michèle Olivier and Delarey van Tonder (eds), University of South Africa Press, 2010: 127-138.

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Nonviolent Resistance to the ‘Other Occupation’: Western Sahara and Aminatou Haidar

Book Chapter in Seeds Bearing Fruit: Pan African Peace Action for the 21st Century edited by Matt Meyer, Elavie Ndura, and Judith Atiri (Africa World Press 2010, forthcoming).

ttp://www.africaworldpressbooks.com/

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The Other Occupation: Western Sahara and the Case of Aminatou Haidar

How long will U.S. authorities ignore the bleak realities of Moroccan repression?

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A Tale of Two Human Rights Awardees

The annual Robert F. Kennedy Award ceremony took place at the White House this year for the first time in its 28-year history. Also for the first time, the president of the United States was there to honor the awardees. Such public support from the White House is in stark contrast with its silence on the fate of last year’s winner, Aminatou Haidar, who is widely known as the Saharan Gandhi. Earlier in November, when she was returning from the United States after receiving the Civil Courage Award from the Train Foundation, Moroccan occupation authorities arrested and expelled Haidar from her homeland of Western Sahara.