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  • hommage post mortem à mohamed abdelaziz

    By David Keene - The Washington Times - Sunday, June 12, 2016


    ANALYSIS/OPINION:
    Mohamed Abdelaziz, President of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic passed away May 31. Few Americans who read the short obligatory mention of his death had ever heard of him or knew there even is a Sahrawi Republic, but he was a great leader, a Muslim democrat and a man who had spent a lifetime fighting for the independence of his people many of whom have lived for decades in U.N. administered refugee camps in Algeria just across the border from their own land. They are in these camps because their land was seized and is occupied by Morocco which has refused all attempts to displace them so the rightful occupants of the land can return to it and live in peace.


    The Sahrawi of the Western Sahara, along with the Palestinians, are homeless. Most people haven’t heard of their plight, however, because President Abdelaziz was a man of peace who, perhaps naively, believed in justice and the rule of law. He was instrumental in the formation of the Polisario Front which fought the Spanish when they ruled the area then known as the Spanish Sahara, but when they left and Morocco moved in he decided to appeal to the world for justice. He went to the International Court of Justice in 1974 claiming that the occupiers of his peoples’ land had no legal or historical claim on which to base their claim and won. The Moroccans ignored the Court findings and dug in as his people fled to the camps in Algeria.


    Undeterred, Mr. Abdelaziz established a Republic within the camps and continued his appeals to the world while in the meantime preparing the some 300,000 Sahrawi refugees for the day they would get their land back. The new Republic in the 1980s adopted a constitution unique to that part of the world. It guaranteed equal rights to all and in the years since the Republic established under it has operated democratically, protected the right of religious freedom and the rights of women, many of whom today hold important positions within the Republic’s government. Mr. Abdelaziz was elected and re-elected president although on several occasions he was placed on the ballot over his objections as he felt it important in a democracy that he step aside.


    It hasn’t always been easy. Many within the camps have wanted to wage a war of terror against Morocco, seeing that those who like the Palestinians resort to violence get the world’s attention while those who seek justice peacefully are ignored and ultimately forgotten. That he was successful during his lifetime in keeping his people from taking this path is a tribute both to his belief in the ultimate triumph of justice and his persuasiveness as a leader. He never faltered in his conviction that at some point the world would take notice and his people would be able to return to their own lands. In the meantime, he urged them to prepare. Today they have a 90% literacy rate, the highest of any group on the African continent and a functioning democracy.

    washington times..

    à se demander à quelle finalité ?

  • #2
    C'est le genre de leader arabe que je ne parviendrais jamais à gober.
    40 ans à la tête d'un mouvement à magouiller pour garder la chefferie, imposer ses vues.

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    • #3
      Mohamed Abdelaziz, President of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic passed away May 31. Few Americans who read the short obligatory mention of his death had ever heard of him or knew there even is a Sahrawi Republic, but he was a great leader, a Muslim democrat and a man who had spent a lifetime fighting for the independence of his people many of whom bla bla bla
      mechant maroc! il a touché combien ce david pour écrire cet article.

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      • #4
        Mr. Abdelaziz was elected and re-elected president although on several occasions he was placed on the ballot over his objections as he felt it important in a democracy that he step aside.
        le pauvre


        sahar ftourek tawenza et merci pour le fou rire

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        • #5
          Tout ce qui est Arabe et démocratique ça me fait rigoler que ce soit les monarchies ou les monarchies république bananières.

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          • #6
            ...Muslim democrat
            Read Over

            la démocratisation aux normes algériennes

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            • #7
              " Tout ce qui est Arabe et démocratique ça me fait rigoler que ce soit les monarchies ou les monarchies république bananières." Azed164

              Exceptée la RASD, je corrobore votre position.

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              • #8
                Exceptée la RASD, je corrobore votre position.

                pas d'exception pour moi peut être que nous ne chaussons pas les mêmes lunettes

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                • #9
                  " pas d'exception pour moi peut être que nous ne chaussons pas les mêmes lunettes"

                  Incontestablement. Je ne porte pas de lunettes et fusse-t'elles roses!

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                  • #10
                    un mouvement de lib"ration ne peut être structuré de façon transparente.. c tjrs sectaire avec une tendance à la paranoïa. c l'unique façon de se prémunir de l'action des services ennemis.


                    OVER : bonne hrira à toi... t'étouffe pas trop et pense à ceux qui en ont pas.

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                    • #11
                      David Keene est un journaleux et politicien verreux qui monnaie ses actions de propagande.

                      Il a d'ailleurs été épinglé par le US Department of Justice pour avoir reçu des dizaines de milliers de dollars de la part de l'Algérie pour faire du lobbying pro-Polisario.

                      Visiblement, il vient de recevoir un autre chèque à 5 ou 6 chiffres de la part des loosers.

                      ......
                      The Dec. 7 commentary, “Our friends in the desert” by David Keene, distorts the history and current realities of the Western Sahara conflict.

                      It is also important to know that, according to the U.S. Department of Justice, Mr. Keene and his consulting firm received tens of thousands of dollars in lobbying fees from Algeria, the Polisario Front’s ideological and financial supporter — a fact Mr. Keene fails to disclose.


                      Rober M. HOLLEY
                      The Hill
                      D'autre part, il était le président de la NRA, le lobby pro-armes aux USA.
                      A noter qu'il a besoin d'argent pour faire libérer son fils qui a été condamné à 10 ans de prison pour meurtre...avec arme à feu.

                      C'est lamentable que les sous-doués moustachus donnent l'argent des algériens à ce genre d'individu pour pondre un torchon qui n'intéressera personne...mais sans doute, il y a des rétro commissions dans le circuit.

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                      • #12
                        Rago moi je parle des monarchies et des républiques qui ont un siège à l' ONU, pas des entités.

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                        • #13
                          OVER : bonne hrira à toi... t'étouffe pas trop et pense à ceux qui en ont pas.
                          bonne chorba à toi aussi,

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                          • #14
                            spoutnik

                            l a d'ailleurs été épinglé par le US Department of Justice pour avoir reçu des dizaines de milliers de dollars de la part de l'Algérie pour faire du lobbying pro-Polisario.
                            le baril est a 48$ sinon alger lui aurai paye un sejour a tindoufistan pour assister a l enterrement du RAT .
                            Dernière modification par Mounir., 15 juin 2016, 20h27.

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                            • #15
                              " le baril est a 48$ sinon alger lui aurai paye un sejour a tindoufistan pour assister a l enterrement du RAT ." mounir.

                              RAT= Medhi Ben Barka?

                              Sachez que le Maroc n'en a pas fini avec son cauchemar du plus éblouissant marocain de tous les temps: Medhi Ben Barka.
                              Rendez-vous est déjà pris cet cet automne!

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