Yearly Archives: 2012

New book exposes the absurd spending of King Mohamed VI of Morocco

£26m pocket money for Morocco’s Midas; New book exposes the absurd spending of  a king who once flew his Aston Martin to Britain for a tune-up

Matthew Campbell, 11 March 2012, The Sunday Times

“HE LIKES his favourite toys to be in good repair. In fact King Mohamed VI of Morocco has been known to fly his Aston Martin on a Hercules transporter to the manufacturer in Britain just for a tune-up.

More than 5m of his subjects live on less than £1 a day. But “His Majesty”, as even close family members must call him, does not have to scrimp or save, for the people’s generosity is limitless. He gets £26m a year in public funds as “pocket money”, which he spends as he pleases, according to the authors of Le Roi Prédateur (The Predator King)….(continued…)

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Presentation by Cate Lewis and Kamal Fadel at 3rd Sustainable Phosphorous Summit

Phosphate from Western Sahara – the Back Story
A talk was given at the 3rd Sustainable Phosphorus Summit held in Sydney 29 February-2 March 2012 by Cate Lewis of the Australia Western Sahara Association and Kamal Fadel, representative of Western Sahara in Australia.

As Western Sahara is one of only a few countries holding considerable reserves of phosphate rock, the conference organisers, Dana Cordell and Professor Stuart White invited the participation of Cate and Kamal so that delegates could find out why there is a problem with importing from this country at the present time.

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Flag of the Saharawi Arab Democratic Republic raised in cities around Australia

leichhardt-flag-2012.JPGThe flag of the Saharawi Arab Democratic Republic was raised in cities around Australia to celebrate the 36th anniversary of the proclamation of the Saharawi Republic (see photos attached).

On Monday 27th February, the Saharawi flag was raised on the Town Hall of the municipality of Leichhardt in Sydney. The ceremony was attended by Mayor Rochelle Porteous, the Saharawi representative to Australia, and members of the Australia Western Sahara Association (AWSA).

The Saharawi Republic flag was raised in the city of Ballarat where it will fly for two weeks. Mr. Paul Clempson, Secretary of the Ballarat Trades & Labour Council raised the flag on top of the Trades Hall. Trades Hall secretary Paul Clempson said “We are supporting the move because the Sahrawi people are being unfairly treated, and being manipulated and dominated by the Moroccans.”

The Ballarat Courier published a news report about the flag raising at Ballarat Town Hall: Read news report >>

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Western Sahara: Fresh brutality from occupying force

Green Left Weekly, Sunday, February 5, 2012

By Ryan Mallett-Outtrim & Laura Gilbie

The Sahrawi people continue to demand independence after decades of poor treatment under Moroccan rule. Many Sahrawi report being routinely subjected to police brutality and say they suffer widespread discrimination.

Activists in Laayoune face a day-to-day struggle with local authorities. The city is touted by the Moroccan government as a regional development hub, but from the ground looks more like an infantry barracks.

The police station is like an enormous shopping mall. Soldiers are everywhere, patrolling the main streets. ….(continued)

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Pambazuka News : Denial of self-determination and human rights abuses

Pambazuka News Feature by Malainin Lakhal
2012-01-19, Issue 566

This is a transcript of the lecture by Malainin Lakhal, secretary general of Saharawi Journalists and Writers Union, presented during a conference organised in Cairo, Egypt, from 15 to 17 January 2012 by the Habitat International Coalition under the title: ‘Sovereignty over the land and peoples’ right to self-determination’.

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Morocco: Repression Undercuts Reform Pledges to Overhaul Laws, Practices to Support New Constitution

Human Rights Watch: World Report 2012
January 22, 2012
(Rabat) – Morocco’s new government should overhaul repressive domestic laws, curb police violence, and enhance judicial independence if it is to realize the human rights promises contained in the country’s new constitution, Human Rights Watch said today in releasing its World Report 2012. Substantial progress in these areas will prove the sincerity of the reforms announced by King Mohammed VI in response to street protests in Morocco and major upheavals elsewhere in the region in 2011.

HRW  Statement >>

HRW World Report 2012: Morocco and Western Sahara>>