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[Dehai-WN] un.org: Amidst series of meetings, UN envoy urges resolution to Western Sahara dispute

From: Berhane Habtemariam <Berhane.Habtemariam_at_gmx.de_at_dehai.org>
Date: Tue, 13 Nov 2012 23:47:34 +0100

Amidst series of meetings, UN envoy urges resolution to Western Sahara
dispute


13 November 2012 - Amid the rising threat of extremist elements in Africa's
Sahel region, the dispute over Western Sahara must be resolved before
lingering hostilities consume the North African territory, the United
Nations top official on the issue warned today.

In a press statement released following his visit with the Foreign Minister
of Spain in Madrid, the Secretary-General's Personal Envoy for Western
Sahara, Christopher Ross, cautioned that the crisis had lasted "far too
long" and called any acceptance of the status quo a "serious
miscalculation."

"I am urging the parties to move swiftly into serious negotiations, and I am
asking key members of the international community to use their influence to
encourage the parties to do so," Mr. Ross stated, adding that in a region in
transition, a conflict such as the one in the Western Sahara "cannot be
allowed to stand still."

The UN has been involved in mediation efforts to find a settlement in
Western Sahara since 1976, when fighting broke out between Morocco and the
movement known as Frente Polisario, after the Spanish colonial
administration of the territory ended. A UN peacekeeping force, known as the
UN Mission for the Referendum in Western Sahara (
<http://www.un.org/en/peacekeeping/missions/minurso/> MINURSO) has also been
in place since 1991.

The envoy said the current status quo is threatened by developments in West
Africa's Sahel region, which has seen the growing presence of Islamist
extremists and militants, including a branch of Al Qaida. Recently, in Mali,
radical Islamists seized control of the north, where they have imposed an
extremist version of Muslim Sharia law and stringent rules targeting women.

The instability and insecurity resulting from renewed clashes in Mali, as
well as the proliferation of armed groups in the region, drought and
political instability has sparked fears among many in the international
community that the Sahel as a whole is on the brink of destabilization.

Mr. Ross pointed out that in this dangerously precarious environment,
Western Sahara's festering hostilities risked sparking renewed violence
which would be "tragic for the people of Western Sahara and for North Africa
as a whole."

According to the UN official's statement, Spanish officials were "keen" to
contribute to the mediation efforts and Mr. Ross noted that he had
"benefited greatly" from the exchange with his Spanish interlocutors.

Prior to his trip to Spain, Mr. Ross also met with delegations from
countries neighbouring Western Sahara - Algeria and Mauritania - which have
been active in establishing confidence-building measures and seeking a
solution to the situation.

In addition, the UN envoy will make stops in Paris, Washington, D.C., London
and Moscow where he plans to address the issue with his counterparts in
those Western capitals before returning to North Africa.

"The conflict must be resolved," Mr. Ross said, "and I believe that it can
be resolved if there is a will to engage in real dialogue and compromise to
find a solution that is honourable for all."

 




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