The camp was a good example of a non-violent action. The violence began when the forces started tearing it down. The big word today is WHY? For more on saharawi non-violent activism, check out this book:
Wednesday, 10 November 2010
MOROCCAN SECURITY FORCES ATTACKED SAHARAWI CAMP
Two days ago the saharawi protest camp outside El Aaíun, was attacked and destroyed by moroccan security forces. According to various news agencies, at least one saharawi was killed. (The total number is still not known.) Many are injured. For more information, see "google-news" below or www.vest-sahara.no (which has videos showing the camp before, during and after the attack of the moroccan forces. Texts in Norwegian, English, Spanish and French. See link at this page).
The camp was a good example of a non-violent action. The violence began when the forces started tearing it down. The big word today is WHY? For more on saharawi non-violent activism, check out this book:
It is actually out of print, but you can order photocopies at amazon.com. Two of the activists mentioned below (Dahane and Tamek) are currently imprisoned in Morocco. They have been waiting for over one year for their trials to begin. Book description from amazon.com: "Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher's book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: Sahrawi Democracy Activists, Sahrawi Human Rights Activists, Aminatou Haidar, Ali Salem Tamek, Brahim Dahane, Mohammed Daddach, Muhammad Bassiri, Mohamed Elmoutaoikil. Excerpt: Aminatou Haidar (born July 24, 1966), sometimes known as Aminatu or Aminetu, is a Sahrawi human rights-defender and political activist. She is a leading activist for the independence of Western Sahara. She is sometimes called the "Saharawi Gandhi" for her nonviolent protests, including hunger strikes, in the support of the independence of Western Sahara.. She is the president of the Collective Of Sahrawi Human Rights Defenders (CODESA). Aminatou was born in 1966 in Akka, Morocco, her grandmother's town, although she lived her childhood in her parents town, Tan-Tan (former Western Sahara). She lives in El Aaiún in Western Sahara, with two children (Muhammad and Hayat), is divorced, and holds a baccalaureate in modern literature. She recognizes herself as a supporter of Polisario. In November 21, 1987, she passed to be one of the hundreds of Sahrawis disappeared in Moroccan prisons. After years of tortures."
The camp was a good example of a non-violent action. The violence began when the forces started tearing it down. The big word today is WHY? For more on saharawi non-violent activism, check out this book:
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