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Western Sahara: Resignation of UN envoy James Baker puts referendum
in doubt
By Brian Smith
28 June 2004
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The resignation of James Baker, the United Nations Secretary
Generals personal envoy to Western Sahara, has thrown the
referendum on the future of the disputed African territory into
question.
Following the Iraq invasion, the United States has increasingly
turned away from using the UN as a means of resolving international
disputes in its favour. Instead, the Bush administration has sought
bilateral agreements, and utilised direct military action, as
the best ways to promote the interests of US imperialism.
Baker, previously a member of both Ronald Reagans and
George Bush Seniors administrations, cited growing frustration
as the reason behind his decision. He had been attempting to broker
an agreement, since 1997, between Morocco, which controls the
territory, and the Polisario Front, which is backed by Algeria.
Both Morocco and Algeria are effectively US client states and
keen to impress their paymaster, but the US has been unable to
resolve the dispute via the UN.
The Polisario Front (Frente Popular para la Liberación
de Saguia el-Hamra y de Río de Oro) is the military wing
of the Saharwi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR) and was founded
to fight Spanish colonial rule in 1973. Spain relinquished control
of the sparsely populated territory in 1976, whereupon it was
promptly annexed by its neighbours Morocco and Mauritania whose
rulers share clan ties with each other. Fighting ensued between
US-backed Morocco and Polisario, continuing for 16 years whilst
Mauritania backed out of the third of Western Sahara which it
controlled in 1979.
In 1991 the UN mission to Western Sahara was establishedusing
the acronym MINURSO to resolve the dispute. It was intended
as a short-term mission but has had numerous extensions, the most
recent being that announced in April this year by UN Secretary
General Kofi Annan, which extended the mission for a further six
months.
Annan has threatened to pull the UN peacekeeping troops out
of Western Sahara next February if no agreement is made. He noted
that the cost of maintaining MINURSO since 1991 has so far reached
around $600 million.
The UN, through MINURSO, promised a referendum on the territorys
futurewhether it should remain a part of Morocco, become
an autonomous province or be granted independence. The issue of
a referendum, initially proposed by the Spanish in 1973, has been
the subject of a long drawn out dispute over who should have voting
rights.
SADR and Polisario leaders accepted the UN referendum process
as a face-saving measure in 1991, having followed the lead of
the Palestine Liberation Organisation, the African National Congress
and other national independence movements in abandoning the armed
struggle in return for a rapprochement with the imperialist powers.
The UN was supposed to supervise the procedure to ascertain
who is eligible to vote in the referendum (i.e., who can claim
to be of Saharwi origin), but colluded instead with Moroccos
use of one delaying tactic after another and turned a blind eye
to the intimidation of the Saharwi population. The UN never had
any real intention of challenging Moroccos domination. Annan
himself has described UN mediation as a zero sum game,
i.e., one with no winners. The continuing impasse between Morocco
and Polisario makes it technically Africas longest-running
war.
In June 2001, Baker advanced a Framework Agreement, known as
the Third Way, which proposed that Morocco relinquish some control
over the Western Sahara in return for Polisario giving up their
demand for independence and accepting some form of devolution.
It initially provided for a four-year transition period, to be
followed by a referendum in which Moroccans resident for more
than one year and Saharwis included on the UNs Repatriation
list as at October 2000 would be eligible to vote.
Following rejection by all parties the agreement was adapted
in 2003, proposing that Western Sahara become a semi-autonomous
region of Morocco for a period of five yearsto be followed
by a referendum. The eligibility to vote was also adapted to include
only Moroccans who had been continuously resident in the territory
since 1999. Polisario has always been concerned that Morocco would
flood Western Sahara with pro-Moroccans prior to any vote.
Polisario accepted the new proposal in July 2003, and the UN
Security Council, shifting from its previous position, backed
it in August 2003. Despite signs in January that Morocco was about
to back the deal, however, it recently ruled out eventual sovereignty
for the territory, suggesting instead greater autonomy. It was
largely frustration with Moroccos intransigence that caused
Baker to resign.
A key concern of Bakers was to stop a re-emergence of
the fighting, since Moroccos stability is of key importance
as a major supporter of US interests in the Middle East. The US
considers it essential to maintain Morocco as a pillar of support
in the Arab world, especially in the face of growing hostility
to American militarism. Morocco provides the US Navy with port
facilities and gives the US Air Force landing and refueling rights.
It receives more US aid than any other Arab or African country,
bar Egypt.
Western Sahara, though larger than Britain, is mainly desert
with a population of about 245,000 concentrated in a few towns.
It is controlled by tens of thousands of Moroccan troops behind
a 1,500-mile defensive wall of sand and minefields. An estimated
165,000 Saharwis have been living in four camps of mud-brick and
canvas over the border in southern Algeria for the past 25 years.
The area is rich in minerals, particularly phosphates, has
substantial fishing rights and contains potentially large oil
reserves. Baker had said that an independent Western Sahara would
be viable, though this is a myth that would only act as a fig
leaf for US domination of the region.
Polisarios hands are somewhat tied, and a return to fighting
seems unlikely since Algeria, Libya and other countries have made
it clear that they would no longer support military action following
the loss of Soviet backing. Libya withdrew its backing for Polisario
following a deal signed between Morocco and Colonel Ghaddafi in
the mid-1980s.
Algeria has historically been the main backer of Polisario,
as a part of its own border disputes with Morocco. It is under
pressure from the West to end its civil war against Islamic fundamentalists
and restore the stability necessary for inward investment and
the exploitation of its resources, including huge oil reserves.
Algeria has also been pressured to resolve its differences with
Morocco. But Algeria favours an independent Western Sahara, which
it might control and would give it direct access to the Atlantic.
The US military presence in the region also makes a return
to the armed struggle by Polisario unlikely. US special troops
are currently active in the Sahelthe region directly south
of Morocco and Algeriaostensibly providing anti-terrorism
training to the militaries of Mauritania, Chad, Mali and Niger.
The US Military is to spend $125 million over the next five years
on the Trans-Sahara Counter Terrorism Initiative (a part of its
Pan-Sahel Initiative), which aims to prevent groups allied to
Al Qaeda from establishing a foothold.
Military cooperation with Tunisia, Algeria and Morocco in the
Maghreb region has increased also. The Maghreb borders the Mediterranean,
which is of strategic geopolitical importance as the main waterway
for transporting oil and armies to and from the Middle East.
The US has for some time openly discussed plans for military
bases in Africa, particularly in the Gulf of Guinea, where a naval
base appears likely on São Tomé and Principe, a
tiny oil-rich island state off the west coast of Africa. Following
the Iraq war the US has sought alternatives to Middle Eastern
oil, and West Africa has large proven and potential deepwater
deposits.
Over the last few years Morocco has given licenses to US firm
Kerr-McGee and French Total-Fina-Elf to explore for oil off the
coast of Western Sahara. The UN has declared that Morocco has
no right to grant such licenses. Meanwhile Polisario has signed
a deal with Australian concern Fusion Oil for exploration off
its coastline. Most recently a UK company, Wessex, has signed
an exploration agreement with Moroccan oil company ONAREP, a deal
which is opposed by Polisario and the SADR.
Spain too has ongoing oil interests in the region determined
by what resources may lie off the coast of Western Sahara, and
its involvement in the $2.3 billion Maghreb-Europe Gas Pipeline,
linking the Hass Rmel field in Algeria with Cordoba in Spain
via Morocco. Spain increasingly favours an independent Western
Sahara, whilst France historically backs Moroccos position.
The essential precondition for the western powers ability
to exploit the oil and gas deposits of the region and to transport
them to their own countries is the political reliability of the
countries which own them and through which the pipelines will
travel.
The European Union governments, like the US government, also
want a settlement of the Western Sahara conflict due to their
trade interests in the region. The issue is considered a stumbling
block in the hoped for resurrection of the Mahgreb Union trade
blocincluding Morocco, Mauritania, Algeria, Tunisia and
Libya.
The US and the European powers, however, are locked in a growing
trade war, with both separately courting North Africa. The EU
is promoting the Mediterranean Basin Initiative, which will bind
all of the Mediterranean countries to the EU in a trade bloc,
and as a source of cheap imports and cheap labour. There have
been calls for associate membership of the EU to be extended to
both Morocco and Algeria. The US, meanwhile, is promoting its
own Middle East Partnership Initiative, which includes North Africa,
and is intended to rival the EU in what is considered to be Europes
backyard.
See Also:
US and European leaders
court North Africa
[15 December 2003]
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