http://www.arabicnews.com/ansub/Daily/Day/041231/2004123120.html

Columbian paper unveils human rights violations in Polisario-controled
camps

Morocco-Colombia, Politics, 12/31/2004 
Columbian mass circulation paper "El Nuevo Siglo," has recently
published an article unveiling the human rights violations and
sufferings sustained by Moroccans sequestered by the Polisario in the
Tindouf camps, southern Algeria.

In a story titled "human rights violations against sequestered persons
in Tindouf," the story author Gonzalo Arbolida, a renowned journalist,
recalls the successful recent visit to his country of a group of
elected officials from Moroccan southern provinces and the meetings
they held with top Columbian officials.

He also denounces the human rights violations practiced by the
Algeria-backed Polisario separatists against Moroccans it is
sequestering in the camps.

The paper also ascribes to Algeria's stubbornness the protraction of
the conflict in the Sahara, a former Spanish colony retrieved by
Morocco in 1975 under the Madrid accord with Spain and Mauritania.

Since the cold war and since the start of decolonization, Algeria has
been stubbornly striving to systematically frustrate Morocco's right
over its territory, writes the journalist who also recalls the visit
to the camps by French Ngo "France Libertˇs" where it reported blatant
abuses against civilian and military Moroccans.

The daily also reports how the French ngo interviewed some 340
prisoners in the camps, quoting the testimony of Saadi El Kali Salek,
prisonnier of war between 1975 and 1995, who relates how he was
arrested with 15 other solders, including one who was immediately
executed while himself was beaten, handcuffed and thrown in a dark cave.

In the night, he went on, members of the Polisario beat prisoners for
several hours before dancing on their exhausted bodies.

Part of the horrors he experienced in the Polisario jails, Salek
recounts how prisoners were tied to a truck and dragged in a long
distance under a scorching sun.

The Columbian journalist further reveals how prisoners are transferred
from one jail to another under threats and are beaten with truncheons,
stressing that few prisoners survive the tortures.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) was one of the few
international organizations to ring the alarm bell over the inhuman
conditions experienced by Moroccans sequestered in the camps, goes on
the paper which also affirms that Morocco's efforts to end this plight
were fruitless, as a result of the stubbornness of the enemies of its
territorial integrity.

Tracing the history of the conflict, the journalist recalls that the
Moroccan southern regions were occupied by Spain, until 1975 when the
Kingdom retrieved them. Since then, it goes, Algeria has not ceased
its support to the separatist Polisario front.

"The Sahara issue is similar to the situation of Columbia which
suffers from the interference of a foreign power or a neighbour
country which are supporting projects by separatist or rebel groups,
says the author who wonders on the decision made by Columbia which has
friendship ties with Morocco but voted in the UN general assembly
against the Kingdom instead of supporting it in its struggle for
territorial integrity.

For the journalist, Columbian president, Alvaro Uribe, surely does not
know about the strange and totally-unacceptable stand taken by the
foreign ministry which voted against principles upheld by himself in
the fight against terrorism.









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