Yearly Archives: 2008

Sahara Film Festival: desert blues

After more than thirty years stranded in one of the most inhospitable areas of desert on earth, refugees from Western Sahara are using the arts to highlight their plight. Peter Culshaw met Manu Chao and Javier Bardem at the Sahara Film Festival. How do you get attention for your cause if you are a marginalised people, ignored for thirty years in the desert? When I spoke to several Saharawi refugees in a camp this month in Southern Algeria they felt they had two options. One: violence – freedom fighting, from their point of view; terrorism, according to their enemies – or two: hosting an arts festival and getting some celebrities along to garner some media attention.
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In the Sahara with Manu Chao and Javier Bardem

The mile high club…. from Guardian.co.uk blog
The in-flight entertainment on the Air Algeria flight from Algiers to Madrid was first class: as the flight took off, world music stalwart Manu Chao and his sidekick Madjid were strumming their guitars and despite discussion among the air stewards, they then simply carried on playing. A friend of Manu’s – a musician, philosopher and bar-owner called Johnny MacLoud – announced with a megaphone that appeared from nowhere that everyone could smoke as well (although no-one did). Half-way across the Med, people were dancing in the aisles.

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5 May 2008 – University of Sydney; Lecture on Western Sahara decolonization issue

The representative of the Polisario in Australia Mr. Kamal Fadel was invited by the Politics Society at the University of cimg0438.JPGSydney on 5 May 2008 to give a talk on Western Sahara: The talk was attended by a large group of students and the Australian public.

The talk was under the title: Western Sahara: The last colony in Africa, the role of the UN in decolonisation and conflict resolution.

The Saharawi representative gave an overview of the process of decolonisation in Western Sahara which begun during the Spanish period when the UN put the Territory on its list of Non-Self-Governing Territories in 1963. Continue reading

New Zealand’s illegal trade in North Africa

Monday, 19 May 2008, 2:33 pm
Article: Gordon Campbell
On May 25, a Turkish owned ship called the Cake is due at Lyttleton harbour, and similar port records show the same ship is due in Napier between 3-5 June. On both occasions, the Cake will be unloading a cargo of phosphates that originated in the Western Sahara region of North Africa. This is a highly dubious trade, in seeming violation of the UN Charter.

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Freedom House: Moroccan occupation of Western Sahara still one of world’s ‘most repressive’

image008.jpg7 May 2008 A prominent human rights group has again denounced the Moroccan occupation of Western Sahara as one of the ‘most repressive’ situations in the world today.The U.S.-based human rights watchdog Freedom House yesterday released its annual report on the world’s most authoritarian regimes and gravest human rights situations.Titled Worst of the Worst: The World’s Most Repressive Societies 2008, the report classified Morocco’s presence in Western Sahara alongside more well-known human rights catastrophes like China, Saudi Arabia and Zimbabwe.

Read the section on Western Sahara here >>

Read the full report here (PDF) >>

New Zealand’s biggest fishing company being criticised

wsmap3.jpgRadio New Zealand
8th May 2008, 7:19 am

New Zealand’s biggest fishing company is being criticised by a European human rights group for operating in disputed waters off Africa.

The Western Saharan Resource Watch human rights group says Sealord owns shares in the company Europacifico, which processes fish caught by a Moroccan company in waters off Western Sahara.