El conflicto del Sáhara
Los tres periodistas de la SER expulsados por Marruecos llegan a Las Palmas
España pide a Rabat deje trabajar a la prensa.- El balance oficial de muertos se eleva a 13, dos civiles y 11 policías
EL PAÍS / AGENCIAS - Madrid / Rabat - 11/11/2010
http://www.elpais.com/articulo/internacional/periodistas/SER/expulsados/Marruecos/llegan/Palmas/elpepuint/20101111elpepuint_6/Tes
The Sahara conflictThe three journalists being expelled from Morocco come to Las PalmasRabat calls on Spain to stop work at the press .- The official death toll rises to 13, two civilians and 11 police
COUNTRY / AGENCY - Madrid / Rabat - 11/11/2010
Morocco has expelled three journalists today to be held chain in Western Sahara after breaking the information blockade imposed by Rabat in Laayoune, following the eviction of the Saharawi camp. Angels Barceló, Nicholas Castilian and Angel Cabrera, who have refused to sign the expulsion order in which they are accused of compromising national security, have been loaded on a plane bound for Las Palmas that has landed at the airport shortly Gran Canaria after four in the afternoon. The Moroccan news agency MAP reported on the expulsion of three professionals "having provided false information about his identity and profession." Also today, through this agency and without notice, the ABC correspondent Luis de Vega has learned that its accreditation was going to be withdrawn. The Government has publicly called on the Moroccan authorities to allow the Spanish journalists do their job.
Minutes after arriving in Spain, Barceló has entered directly in the program's window, where he also told her and her two other suspended students, were on board the plane to nine other journalists have not been let into Morocco . Among these were two journalists from TVE, one of Onda Cero, two of Antena 3, one of France Presse, one public and two Efe, according to information provided by the latter agency. "Our obligation is to be where we are not like where we are uncomfortable," said Barcelo, who has assured that at no time have felt "disadvantaged" by the Executive but this did not succeed with his efforts to avoid deportation. "The Moroccan authorities have deceived us not only to us but they have deceived the Spanish government because they have done nothing that they told the Spanish Government would do," he added.
Foreign Minister, Trinidad Jiménez, has said in an interview in Telecinco that the three professionals, who spent eight hours yesterday police have not formally arrested but were taken to the police to make a statement. The Moroccan government announced Barceló, Castilian and Cabrera would be repatriated in the first commercial flight took off today to Spain from Laayoune by assuming "a serious risk to public order and national security", as reported by Barceló itself Briefing directly into a chain. "We have tried and will expel us like criminals," he complained the director of Time 25. About three in the early morning (GMT Spanish) the police forced them "pushed" to move to the airport, where they remained for hours "locked in a small room with three mattresses and three rolls of toilet paper, constantly monitored by three military, "the story of the journalist.
Lock mocked
The journalists reported that police also prevented a Spanish foreign service officer would agree to both the station and the airport. "We did not want to leave the station without the presence of an official Spanish, but the Moroccan authorities have been deceiving us all the time telling us that (the officer) was to present," said Barceló. This has been confirmed by the Foreign Minister has explained that Spain does not have a consular representative in the area by not recognizing the sovereignty of Morocco, but "an official who can provide any assistance and has not had a chance to see them. " Barceló has been criticized for their expulsion even though he had spoken by telephone with the minister Jiménez and four times with the vice president and interior minister, Alfredo Perez Rubalcaba.
Barceló, Castilian and technical Cabrera came in Laayoune on Wednesday night, breaking the blockade by Rabat to report what is happening in the area. The Moroccan authorities say they will not be allowed to pass the Spanish journalists on security grounds, but the Moroccans and even a French journalist of Le Monde is reporting from there. At a press conference after the Council of Ministers, Jimenez added that both the Vice Rubalcaba as she has asked the Moroccan authorities in the different contacts that have maintained their counterparts in recent days that allow journalists to Spanish their work.
Thus, the Government has made representations to the neighboring country to address the retention of journalists being detained in Laayoune and demanded the return of the credit to the ABC correspondent, Luis de Vega, who now has learned through Moroccan press agency that had been withdrawn permission to work in the country. "Spain has a completely different view of the work of the media, with an absolute and clear defense of the exercise of freedom of expression," said the minister.
Meanwhile, Morocco has offered the latest report on the riots. A Saharawi Brahim Daudi name, has become the second civilian casualty recognized by Rabat, which has also raised to 11 the number of agents of the security forces dead. Hospital sources have indicated to the official news agency MAP that Daudi died last night from wounds received during the dismantling of the protest camp Gdaim Izik, 18 kilometers of Laayoune, where thousands of Saharawi claiming their economic rights. For his part, sources from the government of the administrative capital of Western Sahara have reported the death of a Moroccan agent, noting that the deceased belonged to the body of the Auxiliary Forces, without giving further details.
http://www.elpais.com/articulo/internacional/periodistas/SER/expulsados/Marruecos/llegan/Palmas/elpepuint/20101111elpepuint_6/Tes
The Sahara conflictThe three journalists being expelled from Morocco come to Las PalmasRabat calls on Spain to stop work at the press .- The official death toll rises to 13, two civilians and 11 police
COUNTRY / AGENCY - Madrid / Rabat - 11/11/2010
Morocco has expelled three journalists today to be held chain in Western Sahara after breaking the information blockade imposed by Rabat in Laayoune, following the eviction of the Saharawi camp. Angels Barceló, Nicholas Castilian and Angel Cabrera, who have refused to sign the expulsion order in which they are accused of compromising national security, have been loaded on a plane bound for Las Palmas that has landed at the airport shortly Gran Canaria after four in the afternoon. The Moroccan news agency MAP reported on the expulsion of three professionals "having provided false information about his identity and profession." Also today, through this agency and without notice, the ABC correspondent Luis de Vega has learned that its accreditation was going to be withdrawn. The Government has publicly called on the Moroccan authorities to allow the Spanish journalists do their job.
Minutes after arriving in Spain, Barceló has entered directly in the program's window, where he also told her and her two other suspended students, were on board the plane to nine other journalists have not been let into Morocco . Among these were two journalists from TVE, one of Onda Cero, two of Antena 3, one of France Presse, one public and two Efe, according to information provided by the latter agency. "Our obligation is to be where we are not like where we are uncomfortable," said Barcelo, who has assured that at no time have felt "disadvantaged" by the Executive but this did not succeed with his efforts to avoid deportation. "The Moroccan authorities have deceived us not only to us but they have deceived the Spanish government because they have done nothing that they told the Spanish Government would do," he added.
Foreign Minister, Trinidad Jiménez, has said in an interview in Telecinco that the three professionals, who spent eight hours yesterday police have not formally arrested but were taken to the police to make a statement. The Moroccan government announced Barceló, Castilian and Cabrera would be repatriated in the first commercial flight took off today to Spain from Laayoune by assuming "a serious risk to public order and national security", as reported by Barceló itself Briefing directly into a chain. "We have tried and will expel us like criminals," he complained the director of Time 25. About three in the early morning (GMT Spanish) the police forced them "pushed" to move to the airport, where they remained for hours "locked in a small room with three mattresses and three rolls of toilet paper, constantly monitored by three military, "the story of the journalist.
Lock mocked
The journalists reported that police also prevented a Spanish foreign service officer would agree to both the station and the airport. "We did not want to leave the station without the presence of an official Spanish, but the Moroccan authorities have been deceiving us all the time telling us that (the officer) was to present," said Barceló. This has been confirmed by the Foreign Minister has explained that Spain does not have a consular representative in the area by not recognizing the sovereignty of Morocco, but "an official who can provide any assistance and has not had a chance to see them. " Barceló has been criticized for their expulsion even though he had spoken by telephone with the minister Jiménez and four times with the vice president and interior minister, Alfredo Perez Rubalcaba.
Barceló, Castilian and technical Cabrera came in Laayoune on Wednesday night, breaking the blockade by Rabat to report what is happening in the area. The Moroccan authorities say they will not be allowed to pass the Spanish journalists on security grounds, but the Moroccans and even a French journalist of Le Monde is reporting from there. At a press conference after the Council of Ministers, Jimenez added that both the Vice Rubalcaba as she has asked the Moroccan authorities in the different contacts that have maintained their counterparts in recent days that allow journalists to Spanish their work.
Thus, the Government has made representations to the neighboring country to address the retention of journalists being detained in Laayoune and demanded the return of the credit to the ABC correspondent, Luis de Vega, who now has learned through Moroccan press agency that had been withdrawn permission to work in the country. "Spain has a completely different view of the work of the media, with an absolute and clear defense of the exercise of freedom of expression," said the minister.
Meanwhile, Morocco has offered the latest report on the riots. A Saharawi Brahim Daudi name, has become the second civilian casualty recognized by Rabat, which has also raised to 11 the number of agents of the security forces dead. Hospital sources have indicated to the official news agency MAP that Daudi died last night from wounds received during the dismantling of the protest camp Gdaim Izik, 18 kilometers of Laayoune, where thousands of Saharawi claiming their economic rights. For his part, sources from the government of the administrative capital of Western Sahara have reported the death of a Moroccan agent, noting that the deceased belonged to the body of the Auxiliary Forces, without giving further details.
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