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Holding Crans Montana Forum, contrary to Saharawi people’s rights and interests (UNMS)

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Chahid Al hafed (refugee camps), Feb 19, 2015 (SPS) - Secretary General of Saharawi Women Union (UNMS) has clarified that holding 2015 session of the Crans Montana Forum will be contrary to the rights and interests of the Saharawi people, adding it will be “tantamount” to rewarding Morocco for its unabated human right violations against the Saharawis.


In a letter sent to the Chair of the Board of Directors of Transparency International Ms. Huguette Labelle, the official said the move will be contrary to the relevant principles of international law applicable to Western Sahara as a Non-Self-Governing Territory.


The letter went on saying that by doing so, Crans Montana Forum will contribute to rewarding Morocco for its unabated violation of the basic human rights of the Sahrawi people, including their inalienable right to self-determination.


It, therefore, highlighted that this will encourage Morocco to persist in its illegal occupation and forcible annexation of the Territory, thus undermining the UN-led efforts aiming at achieving a speedy, peaceful and lasting solution to the conflict in Western Sahara.


Following complete text of the letter:


“Bir Lehlou, 17 February 2015


To Ms. Huguette Labelle


Chair of the Board of Directors of Transparency International


Dear Ms. Labelle,


We have learnt that the Swiss organisation, the Crans Montana Forum, is planning to hold its 2015 annual session in Dajla (Dakhla) in the southern part of Western Sahara under Moroccan occupation on 12-14 March 2015. The programme of the session is said to include the holding of the Special Meeting of Crans Montana African Women’s Forum, of which Honorary Committee you are a member.


As you are aware, Western Sahara is still on the agenda of the United Nations as a Non-Self-Governing Territory pending decolonisation. It has never been part of Morocco that continues to occupy illegally large parts of the Territory since 31 October 1975. In its historic advisory opinion on Western Sahara, issued on 16 October 1975, the International Court of Justice clearly established that there never existed any tie of territorial sovereignty between Western Sahara and Morocco or Mauritania. In 2002, the UN Under-Secretary for legal Affairs, Mr Hans Corell, issued an advisory opinion at the request of the UN Security Council in which he reaffirmed unequivocally that Morocco does not exercise any sovereignty or administering power over Western Sahara.


The United Nations, the Organisation of African Unity (now the African Union) and the international community as a whole have never approved Morocco’s occupation of Western Sahara or recognised the legality of its forceful annexation of the Territory. Furthermore, consistent with its doctrine of not recognising as legal any territorial acquisition resulting from the use of force, the UN General Assembly has clearly described Morocco’s presence in Western Sahara as an act of occupation by force (res. 34/37 of 21 November 1979 and res. 35/19 of 11 November 1980). As an occupying power, Morocco thus has no right whatsoever to deal with third parties concerning the Non-Self-Governing Territory of Western Sahara.


Together with its obstructionist attitude towards the UN-led peace process in Western Sahara, Morocco continues to violate systematically human rights and international humanitarian law in the Sahrawi territories under its illegal occupation. The human rights violations involve the disappearance of Sahrawi human rights activists, torture of prisoners of conscience, arbitrary detention, police brutality, intimidation and extrajudicial executions, as was the case of the Sahrawi political prisoner, Hassana El-Wali, who was killed in the occupied city of Dajla in September 2014. All these human rights violations have been documented and made public by human rights organisations such as Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, the Robert F. Kennedy Centre for Justice and Human Rights and the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), among others.


Currently the entire occupied-Western Sahara is put under a military siege and a total media blackout, whilst Morocco continues to ban international observers and media from entering the Territory. Moreover, Morocco persists in plundering illegally the natural resources of the occupied Territory including fisheries, phosphates and other minerals often in complicity with foreign entities and in blatant violation of the permanent sovereignty of the Sahrawi people over their natural resources.


In view of the above-mentioned facts, the decision taken by Crans Montan
a to hold its 2015 annual session in the occupied city of Dajla is thus contrary to the rights and interests of the Sahrawi people and to the relevant principles of international law applicable to Western Sahara as a Non-Self-Governing Territory. It will also be tantamount to rewarding Morocco for its unabated violation of the basic human rights of the Sahrawi people including their inalienable right to self-determination.


The Crans Montana Forum claims that choosing the occupied city of Dajla as a venue for its forthcoming session is a “signal of the strong commitment of the organisation to peace and global dialogue”. However, playing into the hands of Morocco’s colonialist policy will only encourage and embolden Morocco to persist in its illegal occupation and forcible annexation of the Territory, thus undermining the UN-led efforts aiming at achieving a speedy, peaceful and lasting solution to the conflict in Western Sahara.


The Crans Montana Forum also claims that “it has been the first organisation to consider Africa’s major concerns and to foster its hopes and ambitions”. It is paradoxical that the announced Forum, which is supposed to address some of Africa’s major concerns, will be held in the last colony in Africa under the patronage of the occupying power. This fact casts doubt on the appropriateness and impartiality of such an initiative.


For these reasons, the Government of the Sahrawi Republic has officially expressed to the Crans Montana Forum its frustration and deep concern about the planned meeting, which is an unprecedented and provocative move that may have adverse consequences on the current developments of the question of Western Sahara.


The Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR), proclaimed by the Sahrawi people under the leadership of the Frente POLISARIO on 27 February 1976, is a founding Member State of the African Union (AU), which succeeded the OAU in 2002. The SADR is a fully-fledged State that exercises its full sovereignty over the Sahrawi liberated territories; it has been recognised by over 80 countries worldwide. Meanwhile, Morocco remains the only African country that is not member of the African Union because it continues to occupy by force parts of the Sahrawi Republic in violation of the AU Constitutive Act and the principle of the intangibility of borders existing on the achievement of national independence.


Both the AU and its predecessor have strongly supported and championed the right of the Sahrawi people to self-determination and independence and have consistently called for the speedy and unconditional decolonisation of Western Sahara, the last colony in Africa. Deeply concerned about the Crans Montana’s decision to hold its forthcoming Forum in the occupied Western Sahara, the Heads of States and Governments of the African Union, meeting at the 24th ordinary session of the AU Assembly in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, from 30 to 31 January 2015, unanimously adopted an important declaration on the issue.


In the declaration, the AU Assembly considered that the organisation of any international conference in the current circumstances in Western Sahara is in contradiction with the efforts made by the international community to resolve the conflict, and can only create an atmosphere of confrontation in the territory.


It urged Crans Montana and all other organisers to cancel the meeting planned in the occupied city of Dajla (Western Sahara) as it is a grave violation of the international law. It further called upon the AU Member States, African civil society and all organisations not to participate in this Forum.


Since its occupation of Western Sahara in 1975, Morocco has persisted its efforts to involve Governments, representatives of the public and private sector and civil society organisations from around the world in acts intended only to legitimise its illegal occupation of our country. These acts must be strongly condemned and boycotted, because they violate the relevant principles of international law applicable to Western Sahara as a Non-Self-Governing Territory.


In view of the foregoing, given your strong commitment to the cause of peace around the world, I would like to kindly request you to use your good offices to urge Crans Montana Forum to refrain from holding its 2015 session in the occupied city of Dajla, which will only complicate the situation on the ground and fuel more tension in the region.


It is clearly not in the interest of an organisation that claims to be committed to building a more humane and impartial world to be associated with an illegal and brutal occupation that persists in violating fundamental human rights and denying an entire people their nternationally recognised and inalienable right to self-determination and freedom.


Please accept, Madame, my highest regards and best wishes.


Ms. Fatma Mehdi,


Secretary-General of the National Union of Sahrawi Women.”


To note, similar letters were also sent to Mrs. Aicha Bah Diallo, Chairperson of the African Women Educationalists (FAWE), and the President of the Pan-African Women Organisation (PAWO), Dr. Assetou Koite.(SPS)


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