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Saturday, 23 June, 2001, 13:34 GMT 14:34 UK 
Annan backs Western Sahara plan

http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/africa/newsid_1402000/1402088.stm

The Polisario could return to the armed struggle

United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan has called both sides in the 
conflict over the future of Western Sahara to support a new plan for long 
term peace in the disputed territory. 
In a report to the UN Security Council, Mr Annan called on the Polisario 
Front, who represent the indigenous Saharawi people, to accept a delay to a 
planned referendum on independence from Morocco in return for substantial 
autonomy. 



It is high time to settle the dispute over Western Sahara ... [to] enable all 
its people to look to a better future
 
Kofi Annan  
The plan, which also calls for five months of direct negotiations between the 
two sides, represents a last-ditch attempt to resolve the 26-year impasse 
over the region's status. 

Despite hopes of a breakthrough, Polisario has rejected the plan, drawn up by 
former US Secretary of State James Baker, as a "Moroccan proposal", and not 
one that is mutually acceptable. 

On Friday, spokesman Ibrahim Mokhtar said: "To give us an autonomy... we have 
to be first part of [Morocco] and we are not part of [it]." 

Mr Mokhtar said he believed such a proposal did not respect the rights of the 
people in Western Sahara. 

War threat 

He also warned that if the plan was put into action then the Polisario Front 
could restart the armed struggled that it abandoned after a ceasefire 
agreement with Morocco in 1991. 



The 1991 ceasefire has not yet resulted in a referendum
 
"What alternative do we have? Do you want us to die in the refugee camps?" Mr 
Mokhtar said. 

About 160,000 Saharawis have spent most of the last 26 years living in 
refugee camps in an inhospitable desert area. 

The status of Western Sahara has been in dispute since the colonial power 
Spain left the territory in 1975. 

Struggle 

On 27 February 1976 the Polisario Front set up what was in effect a 
government. 

For the next 15 years, it fought a guerrilla war against Morocco which 
occupies most of Western Sahara. 



Polisario say they keep people in tents to give them hope of return
 
The 1991 ceasefire offered the promise of a political settlement. 

However, a UN-sponsored referendum to decide whether Western Sahara should 
become independent or integrated into Morocco has never been held, nine years 
after it was planned. 

The process became bogged down by continuing disagreement over who should be 
allowed to vote and an appeals process.


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