A line in the sand: Fighting 40 years of exile in the desert of Western Sahara By Nicole Crowder
A territory about the size of the United Kingdom that stretches out along the Atlantic Ocean between #Morocco and #Mauritania, Western Sahara is technically the last African colony — it never gained its #independence when #Spain decamped in 1975. The territory is divided in half by a 1,600-mile sand wall and surrounded by some 9 million land mines.
#Western_Sahara is the native land of Sahrawis, or “People of the desert,” in northern #Africa. The Moroccan government has moved some 300,000 settlers into these territories, and this triggered a 16-year war between Rabat (the capital of Morocco) and the Polisario Front Sahrawi independence movement (also called the SPLA, or #Sahrawi People’s Liberation Army). The war, which forced more than 150,000 Sahrawis into exile across the border in Algerian refugee camps, formally ended in 1991, but the #Polisario Front has threatened to resume fighting over the last decade. Next year will mark 40 years of forced exile for the Sahrawis.
In November 2014 photojournalist Tomaso Clavarino began documenting the Western Sahara military bases and cadets in the SPLA who are fighting for Sahrawi independence in what he describes as one of the “world’s least reported crises.”
“The Polisario Front is now ready to take up arms again as the international community and the #UN mission #MINURSO [the United Nations Mission for the Referendum in Western Sahara] have been unable to solve the crisis in 40 years,” Clavarino says. “Sahrawis have been in exile since 1975, when it was annexed by Morocco, and since 1991 MINURSO has been working in Western Sahara to organize a ‘negotiated political solution’ for the independence of this region.”
Clavarino had access to the military bases in Western Sahara, the counterterrorism patrols in the desert, military exercises and parades. He spoke with Polisario Front ministers and army commanders and with activists who fled Morocco and the occupied territories, where there was daily violence against the Sahrawis. Clavarino visited the refugee camps and saw the difficulties of living for 40 years in tents and makeshift houses and relying on humanitarian aid that, with the growth of the terrorist threat in the region in the last three years, has decreased by nearly 70 percent.
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