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The
history of the people of Sanhaja Berber and Arab blood who inhabit Western
Sahara with the capital city Aaiun goes back hundreds of years.
In the XIth century, a confederation of tribes, the "veiled Sanhaja",
formed the Almoravid State. The Almoravids were pious Sanhaja marabouts ,
who left the Sahara to go north where they conquered Morocco. Then there
was a split; one faction returned south to the desert while the other
crossed the Mediterranean, invaded Andalusia, settling in large parts of
Spain, as well a in the present Maghreb. They founded Marrakesh and other
centres and there was a great flowering of culture during their reign.
However they lost contact with the country of their origin and their
former way of life.
The direct ancestors of the present-day Saharawis were tribes which came
from the Yemen in the XVth century. They crossed North Africa and
eventually established themselves in the region of Western Sahara. In the
following centuries there were clashes bet ween these tribes and any
newcomers, for they have always been fiercely independent. The situation
was stabilized in the XVIIIth century when Saguia el-Hamra became known as
the "Land of Saints", a centre of learning and holiness, which
attracted people in search of instruction from far and wide.
Because
of the low, irregular rainfall, the region was inhabited exclusively by
nomadic tribes. They lived by pasturing animals and growing crops where
possible. Their religion was that of Islam, their law was based on custom
and the Koran. Ethnically and culturally distinct from the populations
around them, they moved across the desert on more or less regular routes,
dictated by seasons, wells, waterholes. They knew no frontiers.
Towards the end of the XVIth century, the Sultan of Morocco, Ahmad al-Mansour,
sent an expedition to conquer Timbuktu. His motivation was economics: the
desire for salt, with which to purchase gold and silver. This expedition,
which followed the regular caravan route, had a great influence in the
region. However, it turned out to be ephemeral, the descendants quickly
becoming absorbed in the local population. For slightly over a century
Timbuktu paid tribute to Morocco, then this came to an end. There were
connections over the centuries: religious, cultural and personal ties, but
they were sporadic and did not at any time constitute ties of territorial
sovereignty between Moroc co and Western Sahara.
This can clearly be seen from the terms of the Treaty of Marrakesh signed
in 1767:
ΗHis Imperial Majesty (of Morocco) refrains from expressing an
opinion with regard to the trading post which His Catholic Majesty (of
Spain) wishes to establish to the south of the River Noun, since He cannot
take responsibility for accidents and misfortun es, because His domination
does not extend so far... . Northwards from Santa Cruz, His Imperial
Majesty grants to the Canary Islanders and the Spaniards the rights of
fishing without authorizing any other nation to do so."
Saharawi society, like many others in Africa at that time, was a tribal
society, but it had some specific characteristics. For example, it was
governed by an Assembly of Forty, each of whom represented one of the
Saharawi tribes (this, in contrast with its neighbours, for example
Morocco, where there was a hereditary monarch with absolute powers, or
Mauritania, where it was the strongest tribe which imposed tribute on the
weaker tribes and, in general, dominated them).
Each Saharawi tribe was divided into sub-tribes which had so much autonomy
that a colonial historian from Spain described them as living in
"complete anarchy". This was not so, for so organized was the
tribal society as a whole that they actually had "kafi rs", that
is official representatives to neighbouring tribes in Algeria, Morocco and
Mauritania.
During the XIXth century, relationships with Spain were mostly limited to
questions concerning fishermen from the Canary Islands: in fact Spanish
interest in the territory was principally determined by its desire to
protect the Canary Archipelago. From tim e to time Spain was forced to
negotiate with the chieftains of the area to obtain the restitution of its
sailors. In 1884, to ensure its domination, Spain proclaimed a
protectorate from Cape Blanc to Cape Bojador. In 1885, the Berlin
Conference, which sett led the partition of Africa between the European
powers, ratified this proclamation.
The
Saharawis fiercely opposed the Spanish forces.
In the meantime, France had become the dominant power in North-West Africa
and wished to extend its possessions still further. In 1886, negotiations
were started, to define the frontiers between the French and Spanish
zones. These continued until 1900, whe n the first Franco-Spanish secret
treaty was signed, to be followed by further secret agreements in 1904 and
1912. There was intense resistance, also against the French penetration,
which was to drive Ma al-Aineen, a chieftain of considerable prestige, fro
m Mauritania into Western Sahara, where he headed a coalition of tribes
from Mauritania, Wadi Dahab and Saguia el Hamra. In 1905 he asked the
Sultan of Morocco to support the resistance of the tribe in the Djihad
(holy war) against the invaders.
Apart from fine words, the help was limited to the delivery of a few arms.
Faced with Morocco's weak opposition to the invaders (the monarch was
already coming to terms with French imperialism), Ma al-Aineen, renewing
the exploits of the Almoravids, turned against the Moroccan king.
Marrakesh was taken, but the warriors were stopped on their march to Fez
in 1910 by the French army which had already settled in Morocco (in fact
the French protectorate was only signed in 1912). France, in control of
Morocco, i ntensified its military offensive in Mauritania. Numerous
incursions were also made into Saguia el Hamra and France took later its
revenge on Sheikh Ma al-Aineen and his son, al Hiba.
The fighting continued until 1936. Since Wadi Dahab and Saguia el Hamra
had, for forty years, resisted all efforts at pacification, France
threatened Spain in 1934 that it would occupy these territories.
This diplomatic menace led to Franco-Spanish military cooperation to
destroy the resistance movement north of Mauritania and in the whole of
the "Spanish Sahara". Spain thus truly took possession of its
"colony" in 1936.
The cooperation between France Spain and Morocco culminated, in 1958, in
the military action known as the Ecouvillon Operation. The Saharawi
fighters, who had supported the Moroccans (and also the Mauritanians and
the Algerians) in their liberation struggl e against France, asked them
for support in their liberation struggle against the continuation of
Spanish domination. The Moroccans went through all the motions of helping
the Saharawis and then betrayed them, cutting off their supplies and
munitions. As a result, Spain awarded Morocco the present province of
Tarfaya, south of the Moroccan frontier, which up until that time had been
under Spanish domination and inhabited by Saharawis.
During the 1950s and 1960s, when so many African countries began to accede
to their political independence, the question of the Spanish Sahara was
first on the agenda of the United Nations General Assembly in 1965. The
argument for the liberation of the te rritory was based - as in so many
analogous cases - on the UN General Assembly Resolution 1514 (XV) of 1960,
the Declaration of the Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and
Peoples. The 1965 resolution set the tone of the many resolutions subseq
uently passed on the Sahara question, both by the UN General Assembly and
by other international gatherings, especially the Non-Aligned Conference
and the Organization of African Unity. The Saharawi people have not
remained passive spectators at the invasion and bartering of their land.
After 1958, there were sporadic demonstrations against the Spanish
domination, but it was in 1967 that the struggle began to take organized
form with the creation of the Movement for the Liberation of the Sahara.
An intensive campaign to mobilize the Sahar awi people on behalf of their
independence led to a massive demonstration, in 1970, against the efforts
by the colonial power to turn the Sahara into a Spanish province. The
Spaniards reacted by massacring the demonstrators and dissolving the
liberation mo vement.
Having understood that there was no other way out, the Saharawis decided
to take up armed struggle. On 10 May 1973, the Constitutive Congress for
the Front for the Liberation of Saguia el Hamra and Rio de Oro, known as
the POLISARIO Front, was held.
Shortly afterwards, the first armed action was carried out. Such actions
have caused an escalation of bombardments, massacres and torture of the
civilian population who have been forced to make a mass exodus to the
areas controlled by the POLISARIO Front a nd over the border to Tindouf in
Algeria,which has been supporting the struggle of the Saharawis for
self-determination.
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