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Deadly clashes as Morocco storms Western Sahara camp
by Lamine Ghanmi

Reuters    Translate This Article
8 November 2010

RABAT (Reuters) - Clashes between security forces and protesters in Western Sahara killed several people on Monday after Moroccan authorities stormed the site of the disputed territory's biggest anti-government protest in decades.

Morocco said four of its police officers and a firefighter were killed by protesters, while the pro-independence Polisario Front said Moroccan security forces killed a 26-year-old activist during a raid on a protest camp in the desert.

The violence was some of the worst in years in Western Sahara, a former Spanish colony that was annexed by Morocco in 1975 and ever since has been the subject of a bitter dispute between Rabat and independence campaigners.

Clashes erupted on the day officials from Morocco and the Polisario were gathering near New York for talks brokered by the United Nations and aimed at breaking the stalemate in their dispute, Africa's longest-running territorial conflict.

'It is highly unfortunate that this operation and the events preceding and following it have affected the atmosphere in which these talks are being held,' U.N. spokesman Martin Nesirky told reporters. 'We call on all parties involved to exercise the utmost restraint in the hours and days to come.'

The day of clashes began before dawn when Moroccan security forces broke up a protest camp of thousands of tents near Western Sahara's main city of Laayoune. For a month, the camp had been testing Morocco's tolerance of dissent.

Soon after, several hundred of the people forced out of the camp took their protest to the streets of Laayoune, where they blocked roads with burning tyres, set fire to cars, and threw stones at police.

One protester told Reuters from the scene: 'Anger is boiling over. We are in the streets protesting against Morocco.'

Western Sahara is a sparsely populated tract of desert about the size of Britain, with rich fishing grounds off its coast and reserves of phosphates, used to make fertiliser and detergent.

Morocco says the territory should come under its sovereignty, while the exiled Polisario Front says Western Sahara is an independent state.

The Polisario waged a guerrilla war against Moroccan forces until the United Nations brokered a cease-fire in 1991. Since then, several rounds of talks have failed to produce a deal.

ACCUSATIONS

Moroccan authorities on Monday traded accusations of violence and brutality with the exiled Polisario, which is based in desert camps in neighbouring Algeria.

A Moroccan security official told Reuters a paramilitary policeman and firefighter were stabbed to death by protesters during the operation at the protest camp and a policeman was stabbed to death by demonstrators in a main street in Laayoune.

The same official later said one paramilitary police officer and a police officer, who were both hurt during the operation at the camp, died from their wounds in hospital.

In a statement released in Algeria, the Polisario said protester Babi Mahmoud El Guerguar was killed by the Moroccan army in what it called a 'barbarous act.' The Moroccan security official denied any protester was killed.

For the past month, thousands of protesters had been living in the tent camp demanding jobs and better living conditions—while avoiding references to Western Sahara's political status.

The Moroccan Interior Ministry said it had been negotiating with the protesters but that this was sabotaged by hardliners who it said were also forcing some of the camp-dwellers to stay there against their will.

'They (Moroccan security forces) took action ... after exhausting all possible options for establishing a serious and responsible dialogue,' the ministry said in a statement carried by the official MAP news agency.

But protest activists and the Polisario accused Moroccan security forces of using tear gas and batons to disperse the camp, and of beating women, children and the elderly. They said many protesters were wounded.

'The Polisario Front ... issues a pressing appeal to international public opinion and all human rights groups to urgently intervene to end this campaign of repression,' the Polisario statement said.

(Additional reporting by Lamine Chikhi and Hamid Ould Ahmed in Algiers, Patrick Worsnip at the United Nations and Teresa Larraz in Madrid; Writing by Christian Lowe)

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