http://english.pravda.ru/world/africa/14-09-2009/109273-westsahara-0

Western Sahara: Who will take a stand against Morocco? 
14.09.2009

Morocco: illegal annexation of Western Sahara, repression of the Saharawi 
people, allegations of abduction, torture, disappearance of over 500 human 
rights activists. Morocco continues to refuse to hold a referendum on the 
country's status and commits human rights outrages by the day, while the rest 
of the world turns a blind eye. 

The Moroccan Army invaded Western Sahara in 1975 when the Spanish left their 
North African colony and after the annexation (the Green March), the Moroccan 
government started repopulating it with Moroccans, trying to create an 
imbalance by which the Saharawi people would be in the minority in their own 
country. In 1991 the United Nations Organization brokered a peace treaty 
between the Moroccans and the Polisario Front, under which Morocco pledged to 
organise a referendum on self-determination. 

Morocco has refused to live up to its promise and has repeatedly blocked and 
stalled, while it tightens its grip on the country it invaded - against every 
fibre of international law - and over 165.000 Saharawi refugees are forced to 
brave the inhospitable Algerian desert where they live in exile. 

The latest alleged human rights abuse to be uncovered was the alleged abduction 
of a 19-year-old girl by Moroccan security agents, just because she planned to 
attend a human rights conference in Oxford. The girl was allegedly stripped 
naked and threatened with rape and being killed if she did not cease her human 
rights activities. 

More and more of these stories are getting out of Western Sahara and have been 
documented by a growing army of Internet bloggers, many of them students 
fighting the Moroccan oppression. Konstantina Isidoros, a Ph.D. student at 
Oxford, working with human rights organizations, has compiled a list of 
resources documenting Morocco's crimes (see below). 

And where is this story in the international press? What is the reaction of the 
leaders of the international community? At best any questions asked are 
rebuffed with a diplomatic version of "no comment" (i.e. turn away and pretend 
the question does not exist). 

If the leaders of the international community are too scared or unwilling to 
stand up for what is right and to take a stand against what is wrong then it is 
up to the citizens of the international community to do something and here, the 
international media has a responsibility to live up to. 

By publicising the human rights abuses committed by Morocco and by taking up 
the cause of the Saharawi people, this question can become part of a political 
agenda. It is totally unacceptable that the rights of an entire people are 
violated in this way and it is up to the international community to do 
something about it. Every day that passes without action is an insult to the 
notion that mankind stands for decency or that we have common values which we 
must all aspire to. 

We may start by questioning those we elected to represent us, what is their 
position on Western Sahara, what exactly they plan to do about it and what is 
the timetabled agenda for their actions. 

Sources compiled by Konstantina Isidoros 

http://www.upes.org 

www.sahara-panorama.blogspot.com 

http://asvdh.net/english/?p=542 

http://amnesty.org 

www.talktogether.wordpress.com 

http://freesahara.ning.com 

www.en.efrik.com 

http://moroccoviolatinghumanrightsinwesternsahara.blogspot.com 

Timothy BANCROFT-HINCHEY 

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