2010年11月12日金曜日

The consul in Rabat travel to Laayoune to investigate whether a Spanish died in the revolt

El cónsul en Rabat viaja a El Aaiún para investigar si un español murió en la revuelta

El Consejo de Seguridad de la ONU tratará el martes la crisis abierta tras el violento desmantelamiento del campamento de protesta por la policía marroquí

I. CEMBRERO / A. FRAGUAS - Madrid - 12/11/2010
http://www.elpais.com/articulo/internacional/consul/Rabat/viaja/Aaiun/investigar/espanol/murio/revuelta/elpepuint/20101111elpepuint_16/Tes

The consul in Rabat travel to Laayoune to investigate whether a Spanish died in the revoltThe Security Council UN crisis will open on Tuesday after the violent dismantling the protest camp by Moroccan policeI. Cembrero / A. FORGE - Madrid - 12/11/2010
The Spanish Foreign Ministry today sent the consul in Laayoune Rabat, Rafael Jover, to see if one of the dead Saharan Moroccan repression caused by Hamday Buyema-Babi, 35, is Spanish, according to diplomatic sources.
His family says it is, and has provided even your ID card number. The number provided, in effect, belongs to a Spanish national born in Laayoune, the Ministry of Interior. The Spanish consulate has asked the Moroccan Interior Ministry to communicate the identity of the deceased, but has not yet received a response. He also intends to request a forensic report.
Spanish diplomats, nor those of other nationalities, accredited to Morocco often travel to the Sahara because their governments do not recognize Moroccan sovereignty over this former Spanish colony. Jover displacement is exceptional.
Secretary of Policy and International Cooperation of PSOE, Elena Valenciano, described yesterday as "very serious" the facts and requested "an urgent investigation and explanation by the Moroccan authorities."
War figures
Rabat has so far recognized only had a dead Saharan Buyema that is not in the clashes on Monday after dismantling the protest camp. The Polisario Front claims, however, already are 19 so far this weekend.
Buyema, married and father of two children, was employed by Foss Boucraa phosphate. Returned on Monday by bus to his house when he was forced to drop, according to the version of the Polisario, and once on the street was knocked down and killed by police vans. Sahrawi sources indicate that he was beaten to death.
In addition to arrest Sahrawi-Rabat has announced 163 arrests, but the Polisario claims that amount to 2,000-Moroccan police are looking for a half-dozen foreign activists.
"Where are the foreign activists?" Cries on Wednesday asked the police officers, armed with machine guns raided the home of the Ghalia Djimi, the woman who presides over the ASVDH, a Sahrawi associations defending human rights . "They had no mandate", he adds.
Among these three Spanish foreign militants, who joined the protest camp dismantled Izik Agdaym force on Monday by Moroccan riot.
"We are here, hidden behind closed doors, waiting for the storm to subside," he explains wearily to your Isabel Terrace, 28, a Spanish activist. From his hiding her and Antonio Velazquez, a Mexican musician who enthusiastically supports the Saharawi independence movement, sent communiques in which narrate the "tremendous police repression" suffered by the capital of the Sahara.
To these are added Spanish-born Sahrawi who have acquired such nationality because they were born in that territory, which was a Spanish colony until 1975. A Supreme Court decision of 1998 allows them to regain their lost citizenship.
Of this group also emanate allegations of ill treatment and arbitrary detention. Gachbar Mohamed, a Saharawi living in Salou (Tarragona), recounts in great detail that Ahmed, 38, one of his brothers living in Laayoune, "is missing" while Brahim, 30, "has been tortured hands of the Moroccan forces. " "Both are Spanish," he insists Gachbar unable to prove it.
Talks at the UN
The Security Council on Tuesday the UN held a special meeting on the Sahara, according to an announcement from United Kingdom Mission to the United Nations.
American Christopher Ross, personal envoy of UN secretary general, Ban Ki Moon, will appear before the highest UN body to account for the situation in Laayoune and the outcome of talks in New York in early week between the Polisario Front and Morocco. The Security Council planned to hold a meeting on this subject, but Mexico fought tooth and nail to go on ahead.

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