Dar es Salaam – Global Aid Agency Oxfam has called on governments to reaffirm the role and peacekeeping mandate of the UN in Western Sahara and to encourage all parties to urgently return to the negotiation table.
Oxfam, in a press release, echoed the UN’s call for a just and lasting political resolution acceptable to all parties, including the right to self-determination of the people of Western Sahara.
The agency expressed deep concern that recent events could exacerbate Western Sahara tensions and put the region on the brink of armed conflict.
It regretted the recent expulsion from Western Sahara of 73 civilian peacekeepers and the closure of the Dakhla liaison office to the Western Sahara peacekeeping mission.
It said since the onset of the conflict in 1975, many Sahrawi refugees had lived in refugee camps near Tindouf, Algeria, where Oxfam has provided humanitarian assistance in the camps for the past 40 years.
“Abandoning negotiation and the UN peacekeeping process increases the risk of violence and needlessly prolongs the conflict.
“Four decades – nearly three generations – is far too long to expect anyone to live as a refugee.
“Restarting negotiations is urgent and essential for regional stability, and is the best way to avoid any escalation of the conflict,” Soazic Dupuy, head of Oxfam’s work in the camps, said.
According to Oxfam, conditions in Sahrawi camps were extremely difficult, especially after devastating floods at the end of 2015.
The agency said in spite of great need, international humanitarian funding for Sahrawi refugees had dropped more than 30 per cent since 2012.
“With negotiations now in jeopardy, and UN peacekeepers on their way out of the region, the international community must quickly escalate its diplomatic efforts.
“The efforts should push for a long-overdue resolution to the conflict in order to avoid further deterioration of the humanitarian crises.
“Sahrawi youth know nothing other than life as refugees. They deserve a negotiated peace process and the opportunity to live a just and dignified life,” Dupuy said.