PACIFIC MEDIA CENTRE
Global Watch
WESTERN SAHARA: Visiting diplomat slams NZ phosphate shipments
By Katie Llanos-Small: Pacific Media Centre, 22 August 2008
A Western Saharan diplomat has condemned New Zealand’s purchases of the territory’s fertilisers from Morocco.
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Buying phosphates and fertilisers from Morocco supported the illegal occupation of Western Sahara, says Mohamed Beissat, the territory’s Foreign Affairs Minister for Africa.
“We hope New Zealand will stop these shipments,” Beissat says.
Western Sahara has campaigned for independence since the 1970s when the Spanish colonial power moved out and Morocco took control.
The territory is rich in fish, phosphates, gas and petroleum.
Beissat visited New Zealand en route to this week’s Pacific Islands Forum in Niue where he was due to meet leaders and put forward the case for official recognition of the territory.
Many Pacific Island nations are sympathetic to the Western Saharan cause because they had also gone through colonisation and decolonisation, he says.
Vanuatu recently established diplomatic links with Western Sahara.
East Timor and Papua New Guinea also recognise Western Sahara as an independent country.
Beissat describes the Moroccan occupation as “a very simple case of justice and of peace”.
A referendum needed to be held to give Western Saharans the choice of remaining part of Morocco, seeking autonomy or becoming an independent country, he says.
“It’s more fair, more just, more democratic to give people the choice.”
Western Sahara has been on the United Nations’ decolonisation list since 1990. The 16 countries on the list are “non-self-governing territories” to be helped toward independence.
Beissat believes it is “outrageous” that global powers helped Kosovo to independence, when the province was not on the UN’s decolonisation list.
“We were surprised by the double standards displayed by the superpowers,” Beissat says.
“We think priority should be given to the 16 countries on the UN decolonisation list.”
Beissat is one of 160,000 Western Saharans who live in desert refugee camps in neighbouring Algeria.
People there live in tents or in mud huts. There are schools and hospitals, and water and gas for cooking, but no electricity.
Beissat met unofficially with politicians from Labour, the Green Party and the Maori Party while in New Zealand.
Katie Llanos-Small is a Graduate Diploma in Journalism student journalist in AUT University’s School of Communication Studies.
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