(Redirected from Foreign relations of Western Sahara)
The 'politics of Western Sahara' take place in a framework of an area claimed by both the
Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic and the Kingdom of
Morocco, which controls the majority of the territory.
Colonized by Spain from 1884 to 1975, as
Spanish Sahara, the territory has been listed with the
United Nations as a case of incomplete
decolonization since the 60s, making it the last major territory to effectively remain a
colony[1]. The conflict is largely between the Kingdom of Morocco and the
Algerian-backed
nationalist organization the
Polisario Front (Popular Front for the Liberation of the
Saguia el-Hamra and
Río de Oro), which in February 1976 formally proclaimed the
Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR), now basically administered by a
government in exile in
Tindouf, Algeria.
Following to the
Madrid Accords, the territory was partitioned between Morocco and
Mauritania in November 1975, with Morocco acquiring northern two-thirds. Mauritania, under pressure from Polisario
guerrillas, abandoned all claims to its portion in August 1979, with Morocco moving to annex that sector shortly thereafter and has since asserted administrative control over the majority of the territory.
A portion is administered by the SADR. The Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic was seated as member of the
Organisation of African Unity in 1984, and was a founding member of the
African Union. Guerrilla activities continued until a
United Nations-monitored
cease-fire was implemented September 6, 1991 via the mission
MINURSO. The mission patrols the separation line between the two territories (maps:
[2],
[3],
[4]).
In 2003, the UN's envoy to the territory,
James Baker, presented the
Baker Plan, known as Baker II which would have given Western Sahara immediate
autonomy as the
Western Sahara Authority during a five-year transition period to prepare for a
referendum, offering the inhabitants of the territory a choice between
independence,
autonomy within the Kingdom of Morocco, or complete integration with Morocco. Polisario has accepted the plan, but Morocco has rejected it. Previously in 2001, Baker had presented his framework plan, called Baker I, where the dispute would be finally solved through an autonomy within Moroccan sovereignty, but Algeria and the Polisario front refused it. Algeria had proposed the partition of the territory instead
[5].
Suffrage
The population under Moroccan control participates in countrywide and regional
Moroccan elections. A
referendum on independence or integration with Morocco was agreed upon by Morocco and the Polisario Front in 1991, but it has yet to take place.
The population under Polisario control and in the
Sahrawi refugee camps of
Tindouf,
Algeria, participates in
elections to the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic.
See also
★
Foreign relations of Morocco#Western Sahara
★
Legal status of Western Sahara