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First Battle of Amgala

First Battle of Amgala
Part of the Western Sahara War
Date27–29 January 1976
Location26°26′48″N 11°30′53″W / 26.44667°N 11.51472°W / 26.44667; -11.51472[1]
Result

Moroccan victory

Belligerents
 Morocco  Algeria
Polisario Front
(alleged by Morocco)
Commanders and leaders
King Hassan II
Mohamed Ben Othman
Pres. Houari Boumediene
Lounès Arib
Strength
2 battalions of 600 men 1 battalion of 400 men[2]
Casualties and losses
440 killed
(Polisario claim)
400 killed
(Algerian claim)[3]
2 Killed, 16 wounded
(Moroccan claim)[4]
1 Moroccan F-5 aircraft shot down[5]
200 killed
106–118 captured
(Moroccan claim)[6][7][3]
class=notpageimage|
Location within Western Sahara

The First Battle of Amgala was fought between 27 and 29 January 1976 around the oasis of Amgala, Western Sahara,[a] about 260 kilometres (160 mi) west of the border with Algeria. Units from the Algerian Army were attacked by units from the Royal Moroccan Armed Forces on the night of 27 January.[10] The Algerians withdrew after fighting for 36 hours.[11] However, the retaliation came fairly soon, between 13 and 15 February 1976 Polisario units defeated Moroccan troops in the second Battle of Amgala.

Spanish Sahara was one of the last colonial possessions in Africa.[12]Morocco had been fighting Spain for the liberation of this territory since 1957 after the Ifni war while Polisario Front, an organization of the local Sahrawi people, had been fighting for independence since its foundation on 1973.[13] The United Nations had long called for a plebiscite on the future status of the colony, but in November 1975 Spain signed an agreement under which it was split between Morocco and Mauritania with no prior referendum.[12][14] By January 1976 Morocco controlled most towns in their assigned sector.[9] Thousands of Sahrawi nomads were fleeing east to Algeria.[15]

Algeria claimed their troops were providing food and medical supplies to refugees at Amgala, while Morocco said the Algerian troops were heavily armed and were aiding Polisario. The Moroccan attack went in during the night of 27 January, and on 29 January the Algerians withdrew. The number of deaths on either side is disputed, but over 100 Algerians were taken prisoner.[4] The two countries seemed close to war, but after intense diplomacy there were no further engagements between Algerian and Moroccan troops.[16]

Background edit

 
Road map of Western Sahara.

The sparsely populated region of Western Sahara was formerly the Spanish colonial possession of Spanish Sahara.[12] It was mainly inhabited by the Zenaga Berbers and Sahrawi people, a nomadic people of mixed Arab and Berber origin who practice Sunni Islam.[17][18] In 1966 the United Nations General Assembly called on Spain to hold a plebiscite on self-determination for the territory.[12] The United Nations reaffirmed this demand several times in the following years, the last time on 10 December 1975.[19] In May 1973 the Polisario Front was formed to fight for independence. Algeria provided a haven for Polisario and for Sahrawi refugees in the Tindouf area.[13] Over the following years, Polisario gained control over large parts of the interior. Polisario's numbers were increased by deserters from the Spanish-led Tropas Nómadas and territorial police.[20]

Under the Madrid Accords of 14 November 1975, Spain agreed to divide the region between Morocco and Mauritania without holding a referendum.[14] Details of the agreement were secret, but seem to have included economic concessions to Spain.[21] The Moroccan army entered Dakhla (formerly Villa Cisneros) on 9 January 1976, and on 12 January was joined by Mauritanian troops. On that day the last Spanish Legion troops left the Western Sahara.[9] Algeria, which had not been consulted in the Madrid Accords, had launched a campaign in support of Western Sahara self-determination. In December 1975 large numbers of Moroccans were expelled from Algeria, and Algeria began to infiltrate troops into Western Sahara.[22] By the end of 1975 there were 20,000 Algerian soldiers in the Spanish Sahara or in the neighboring Tindouf zone.[23] According to the Red Cross, about 40,000 refugees were fleeing eastward to escape the advancing Moroccan forces.[15]

Battle edit

 
Soviet-manufactured 2K12 Kvadrat (SA-6B Gainful) missile batteries in Baghdad. Reporters were shown missiles with Algerian army markings at Amgala after the battle.

In January 1976, the Amgala waterhole was being used as a staging point for refugees being evacuated to Algeria, assisted by Algerian troops.[24] According to the Algerians, their troops were supplying refugees with food and medical supplies. The Moroccans said that the Algerians were heavily armed with field guns, mortars, anti-aircraft guns and missiles.[4] Some sources say Polisario fighters were present at Amgala, and Algeria had supplied an SA-6 antiaircraft battery with trained Algerian operators so Polisario could fend off Moroccan aircraft that were using napalm bombs.[25][26][27] The Moroccans showed reporters Soviet-made missiles with Algerian army markings at the site a few days after the battle.[4]

On the night of 27 January, Moroccan troops surprised the Algerian troops at Amgala.[4] The subsequent engagement lasted for 36 hours. According to Moroccan sources, about 1,200 men were involved in the battle including Algerian soldiers and Sahrawi militia men. The Algerians withdrew on 29 January.[11]

A Polisario spokesman said 440 Moroccans were killed. A Moroccan spokesman said only two of the attackers died and fourteen were wounded, while about 200 Algerians were killed and 109 captured.[4] The Moroccans said they also captured twelve Sahrawis from the Polisario Front.[11] The Algerian newspaper El Moudjahid claimed 400 Moroccan deaths, and went on to say Algeria would have chosen more effective weapons and a more strategic location than the Western Sahara if the intent had been to attack Morocco.[3] International Red Cross officials confirmed the number of Algerian prisoners when they visited them in their place of detention near Rabat.[4]

Aftermath edit

The day after the attack, on 28 January Algerian President Houari Boumediene sent messages to heads of state around the world. To leaders of the non-aligned countries he said that Algeria was concerned only with the right to self-determination of their brothers and neighbors in Western Sahara, who were facing what amounted to genocide. To the socialists he talked of the Moroccan imperialist strategy in the region. To the western leaders he talked of the right to a free and fair referendum to determine the future of the country. Algeria also presented their position to the United Nations and its Security Council, and held a series of meetings with Arab leaders. Egypt took the most active role in the follow-up diplomacy, calling for an immediate cease-fire and a meeting between the heads of state of Morocco, Algeria and Egypt to resolve the issue, but this was not accepted.[28] Algeria started to provide arms and training to Polisario forces.[24]

On 3 February 1976 Morocco declared that it was willing to submit its dispute with Algeria to arbitration by the Arab League, the Organization of Arab Unity or the United Nations. The U.N. Secretary General appointed Olof Rydbeck, the Swedish ambassador to the U.N. as a mediator. Rydbeck's appointment was welcomed by Algeria, but treated with reserve by Morocco. He visited Western Sahara between 7 and 11 February, visiting El Aaiún, Dakhla and Smara.[28] Although he talked to some local people, he was not able to meet Polisario representatives.[29]

While this diplomacy was continuing, Morocco and Mauritania were completing their occupation of the territory. On 12 February 1976 the Moroccan army occupied Al Mahbes, a community 50 kilometres (31 mi) from the Algerian border that commanded the route to Tindouf. Polisario could not hope to defeat the Moroccan army in open battle, so adopted a guerilla policy of raids and withdrawals to create a zone of insecurity.[29] Renewed fighting flared up at Amgala in February 1976.[30] In an engagement on the night of 14–15 February a force attacked the garrison that Morocco had left at Amgala, causing several dozen deaths (see Second Battle of Amgala).[31] The Moroccan garrison was almost wiped out.[32]Hassan II of Morocco immediately accused Algeria of involvement in the attack, saying the Algerians had used heavy weapons "in numbers conceived for annihilation." Algeria denied that they had participated, and said only Polisario forces had been involved.[4]

These two engagements at Amgala are the only two cases where Algerian and Moroccan troops came into conflict during the Western Sahara War.[33] There were many stories of later Algerian involvement, but there was no proof since no Algerian prisoners were taken after Amgala.[16] In Addis Ababa later that month, Algeria worked for recognition of the Polisario Front by the Organisation of African Unity.[34] Spain officially withdrew from the territory on 27 February 1976, and that day Polisario formally proclaimed the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR).[8] Algeria recognized SADR on 6 March 1976. The next day Morocco broke off diplomatic relations with Algeria.[34] Later in the spring of 1976, Polisario regained Amgala. Morocco took the position once again in May 1977.[24]

Ten years later, with a thawing of relations between Algeria and Morocco, on 25 May 1987 one hundred and fifty Moroccan prisoners of war were exchanged for 102 Algerian soldiers captured during the Battle of Amgala in 1976.[35] Further serious fighting occurred at the oasis in the second Battle of Amgala, when Polisario fighters attacked and temporarily defeated a relatively small number of Moroccan troops before retreating, only to lose the territory to Moroccans again.[36]

Civilian casualties and military abuses edit

In April 2013, specialists from the University of the Basque Country and the Aranzadi Science Society were contacted by Saharawi families of victims to investigate the discovery of human remains in the Fadret area near Amgala. DNA tests and a forensic investigation are being carried out by this team, which is also investigating the circumstances of their deaths. The team concluded in September 2013 that 8 Sahrawi civilians, including 2 children, had been arrested in February 1976 by a Moroccan military patrol and executed by gunfire, before being buried on the spot.[37]

Dr. Carlos Martin Beristain then concluded: "The fact of finding their remains on the spot is symptomatic of extrajudicial executions".[38]

However, the Equity and Reconciliation Commission (IER), launched by the Moroccan authorities in 2004 to investigate enforced disappearances and other violations, had given no information on the fate of the eight people. The Consultative Council on Human Rights (CCDH), a national body for the protection and promotion of human rights, which had carried out an investigation into four of the eight persons who had been reported missing, had concluded that the four persons had been arrested by Moroccan soldiers near Amgala in February, June and July 1976. The CCDH claims that the four were taken to the military barracks in Smara where they later died.[37]

A former Moroccan soldier, M'barek Daoudi, who served more than 33 years in the Moroccan army and retired in 2008, said in an interview that he witnessed the execution of two Sahrawi women in the Amgala area on 12 February 1976.[38]

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ The term "Western Sahara" is used here in the geographical sense. In theory, Western Sahara was under Spanish administration until 27 February 1976.[8] Moroccan forces occupied Smara on 27 November 1975, and they and the Mauritanians progressively took over the rest of the Western Saharan settlements in the weeks that followed. The last Spanish troops left from Villa Cisneros on 12 January 1976.[9] After that, control of the region was (and still is) disputed.[8]

Citations

  1. ^ Rodrigue 2011, p. 69.
  2. ^ Barbier 2003, p. 185.
  3. ^ a b c Cuatrocientos muertos ... 1976.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Hughes 2006, p. 252.
  5. ^ "La polémique continue entre Alger et Rabat sur la seconde bataille d'Amgala". Le Monde. 18 February 1976. Retrieved 20 July 2020.
  6. ^ Abdelhak El Merini, L'armée marocaine à travers l'Histoire, Dar Nachr Al Maârifa 2000, p.421 (ISBN 9981-808-42-3)
  7. ^ Mohsen-Finan, Khadija (23 April 2015). "Conflit du Sahara occidental, de la guérilla au gel durable". Orient XXI (in French). Retrieved 11 May 2021.
  8. ^ a b c Chatty 2010, p. 42.
  9. ^ a b c Thompson, Thompson & Adloff 1980, p. 176.
  10. ^ Hollowell 2009, p. 11.
  11. ^ a b c Argelia acusa ... 1976.
  12. ^ a b c d Suksi 1993, p. 257.
  13. ^ a b Naylor 2006, p. 384.
  14. ^ a b McDonald & Fischer 2005, p. 376.
  15. ^ a b Jensen 2005, p. 29.
  16. ^ a b Zartman 1990, p. 44.
  17. ^ Callahan & Shillington 2001, p. 560.
  18. ^ Pieroni & Vandebroek 2009, p. 246-247.
  19. ^ Rauschning, Wiesbrock & Lailach 1997, p. 186.
  20. ^ Cuervo 2006, p. 213.
  21. ^ Jensen 2005, p. 28.
  22. ^ Berramdane 1992, p. 61-62.
  23. ^ Zartman 1990, p. 43.
  24. ^ a b c Mikaberidze 2011, p. 96.
  25. ^ Milestones.
  26. ^ Pennell 2000, p. 340.
  27. ^ Brzoska & Pearson 1994, p. 164.
  28. ^ a b Barbier 2003, p. 186-187.
  29. ^ a b Barbier 2003, p. 188.
  30. ^ Berramdane 1992, p. 61.
  31. ^ Barbier 2003, p. 189.
  32. ^ San Martin 1976.
  33. ^ Thompson, Thompson & Adloff 1980, p. 239.
  34. ^ a b Berramdane 1992, p. 62.
  35. ^ France Libertés 2003, p. 16.
  36. ^ Basco 1989.
  37. ^ a b "De nouvelles révélations sur des disparitions de Sahraouis soulignent le manque de vérité et de justice". Amnistie internationale Canada francophone (in French). Retrieved 23 July 2020.
  38. ^ a b "Sahara occidental. L'exhumation qui confronte le Maroc à ses responsabilités". L'Humanité (in French). 17 February 2014. Retrieved 23 July 2020.

Sources

  • "Argelia acusa la derrota de Angola". ABC (in Spanish): 41. 7 February 1976. Retrieved 24 July 2012.
  • Barbier, Maurice (June 2003). Le conflit du Sahara occidental: Réédition d'un livre paru en 1982 (in French). Harmattan. ISBN 978-2-296-27877-6. Retrieved 23 July 2012.
  • Basco, Sebastian (9 November 1989). "Tercera gran ofensiva del Polisario en menos de un mes". ABC (Madrid): 34. Retrieved 23 July 2012.[unreliable source?]
  • Berramdane, Abdelkhaleq (1992). Le Sahara occidental (in French). KARTHALA Editions. ISBN 978-2-86537-352-9. Retrieved 22 July 2012.
  • Brzoska, Michael; Pearson, Frederic S. (1994). Arms and Warfare: Escalation, De-Escalation, and Negotiation. Univ of South Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-87249-982-9. Retrieved 23 July 2012.
  • Callahan, Bryan; Shillington, Kevin (2001). Peoples of Africa: Togo-Zimbabwe. Marshall Cavendish. ISBN 978-0-7614-7168-4. Retrieved 23 July 2012.
  • Chatty, Dawn (3 May 2010). Deterritorialized Youth: Sahrawi and Afghan Refugees at the Margins of the Middle East. Berghahn Books. ISBN 978-1-84545-653-5. Retrieved 23 July 2012.
  • "Cuatrocientos muertos marroquíes en la Batalla de Amgala" (in Spanish). ABC Sevilla. 3 February 1976. Retrieved 11 May 2021.
  • Cuervo, José Ignacio Algueró (July 2006). El Sahara y España: Claves de una descolonización pendiente (in Spanish). Ediciones IDEA. ISBN 978-84-96640-31-3.
  • "Las condiciones de detención de los prisioneros de guerra marroquís detenidos en Tindouf (Argelia)" (PDF) (in Spanish). Fundación France Libertés. July 2003. Retrieved 24 July 2012.
  • Hollowell, Thomas (15 June 2009). Allah's Garden. Allah's Garden: A True Story. ISBN 978-0-9641423-9-8. Retrieved 22 July 2012.
  • Hughes, Stephen O. (1 March 2006). Morocco Under King Hassan. Garnet & Ithaca Press. ISBN 978-0-86372-312-4. Retrieved 23 July 2012.
  • Jensen, Erik (2005). Western Sahara: Anatomy of a Stalemate. Lynne Rienner Publishers. ISBN 978-1-58826-305-6. Retrieved 23 July 2012.
  • McDonald, Avril; Fischer, Horst (March 2005). Yearbook of International Humanitarian Law. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-90-6704-189-8.
  • Mikaberidze, Alexander (31 July 2011). "Amgala, Battles of (1976–1979)". Conflict and Conquest in the Islamic World: A Historical Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-59884-336-1. Retrieved 23 July 2012.
  • . United Nations Mission for the Referendum in Western Sahara. Archived from the original on 31 July 2012. Retrieved 22 July 2012.
  • Naylor, Phillip Chiviges (2006). Historical Dictionary of Algeria. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-5340-9. Retrieved 23 July 2012.
  • Pennell, C. R. (2000). Morocco Since 1830: A History. NYU Press. ISBN 978-0-8147-6677-4. Retrieved 23 July 2012.
  • Pieroni, Andrea; Vandebroek, Ina (1 October 2009). Traveling Cultures and Plants: The Ethnobiology and Ethnopharmacy of Human Migrations. Berghahn Books. ISBN 978-1-84545-679-5. Retrieved 23 July 2012.
  • Rauschning, Dietrich; Wiesbrock, Katja; Lailach, Martin (28 August 1997). "3458 (XXX). Question of Spanish Sahara". Key Resolutions of the United Nations General Assembly, 1946–1996. CUP Archive. ISBN 978-0-521-59704-3. Retrieved 23 July 2012.
  • Rodrigue, Alain (1 October 2011). La Seguia el Hamra: Contribution à l'étude de la préhistoire du Sahara Occidental. L'Harmattan. ISBN 978-2-296-56232-5. Retrieved 23 July 2012.
  • San Martin, Eduardo (8 May 1976). "El rearme del ejército, un peligro para el trono marroquí". El País (in Spanish). Retrieved 24 July 2012.[unreliable source?]
  • Suksi, Markku (1993). Bringing in the People: A Comparison of Constitutional Forms and Practices of the Referendum. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers. ISBN 978-0-7923-2208-5. Retrieved 23 July 2012.
  • Thompson, Virginia McLean; Thompson, Virginia; Adloff, Richard (1980). The Western Saharans: Background to Conflict. Croom Helm. ISBN 978-0-389-20148-9. Retrieved 23 July 2012.
  • Zartman, Ira William (1990). La résolution des conflits en Afrique (in French). Ed. l'Harmattan. ISBN 978-2-7384-0393-3. Retrieved 23 July 2012.

first, battle, amgala, part, western, sahara, wardate27, january, 1976locationamgala, western, sahara26, 44667, 51472, 44667, 51472, resultmoroccan, victory, algerian, withdrawal, second, battle, amgalabelligerents, morocco, algeria, polisario, front, alleged,. First Battle of AmgalaPart of the Western Sahara WarDate27 29 January 1976LocationAmgala Western Sahara26 26 48 N 11 30 53 W 26 44667 N 11 51472 W 26 44667 11 51472 1 ResultMoroccan victory Algerian withdrawal Second Battle of AmgalaBelligerents Morocco Algeria Polisario Front alleged by Morocco Commanders and leadersKing Hassan II Mohamed Ben OthmanPres Houari Boumediene Lounes AribStrength2 battalions of 600 men1 battalion of 400 men 2 Casualties and losses440 killed Polisario claim 400 killed Algerian claim 3 2 Killed 16 wounded Moroccan claim 4 1 Moroccan F 5 aircraft shot down 5 200 killed106 118 captured Moroccan claim 6 7 3 class notpageimage Location within Western Sahara The First Battle of Amgala was fought between 27 and 29 January 1976 around the oasis of Amgala Western Sahara a about 260 kilometres 160 mi west of the border with Algeria Units from the Algerian Army were attacked by units from the Royal Moroccan Armed Forces on the night of 27 January 10 The Algerians withdrew after fighting for 36 hours 11 However the retaliation came fairly soon between 13 and 15 February 1976 Polisario units defeated Moroccan troops in the second Battle of Amgala Spanish Sahara was one of the last colonial possessions in Africa 12 Morocco had been fighting Spain for the liberation of this territory since 1957 after the Ifni war while Polisario Front an organization of the local Sahrawi people had been fighting for independence since its foundation on 1973 13 The United Nations had long called for a plebiscite on the future status of the colony but in November 1975 Spain signed an agreement under which it was split between Morocco and Mauritania with no prior referendum 12 14 By January 1976 Morocco controlled most towns in their assigned sector 9 Thousands of Sahrawi nomads were fleeing east to Algeria 15 Algeria claimed their troops were providing food and medical supplies to refugees at Amgala while Morocco said the Algerian troops were heavily armed and were aiding Polisario The Moroccan attack went in during the night of 27 January and on 29 January the Algerians withdrew The number of deaths on either side is disputed but over 100 Algerians were taken prisoner 4 The two countries seemed close to war but after intense diplomacy there were no further engagements between Algerian and Moroccan troops 16 Contents 1 Background 2 Battle 3 Aftermath 4 Civilian casualties and military abuses 5 ReferencesBackground edit nbsp Road map of Western Sahara The sparsely populated region of Western Sahara was formerly the Spanish colonial possession of Spanish Sahara 12 It was mainly inhabited by the Zenaga Berbers and Sahrawi people a nomadic people of mixed Arab and Berber origin who practice Sunni Islam 17 18 In 1966 the United Nations General Assembly called on Spain to hold a plebiscite on self determination for the territory 12 The United Nations reaffirmed this demand several times in the following years the last time on 10 December 1975 19 In May 1973 the Polisario Front was formed to fight for independence Algeria provided a haven for Polisario and for Sahrawi refugees in the Tindouf area 13 Over the following years Polisario gained control over large parts of the interior Polisario s numbers were increased by deserters from the Spanish led Tropas Nomadas and territorial police 20 Under the Madrid Accords of 14 November 1975 Spain agreed to divide the region between Morocco and Mauritania without holding a referendum 14 Details of the agreement were secret but seem to have included economic concessions to Spain 21 The Moroccan army entered Dakhla formerly Villa Cisneros on 9 January 1976 and on 12 January was joined by Mauritanian troops On that day the last Spanish Legion troops left the Western Sahara 9 Algeria which had not been consulted in the Madrid Accords had launched a campaign in support of Western Sahara self determination In December 1975 large numbers of Moroccans were expelled from Algeria and Algeria began to infiltrate troops into Western Sahara 22 By the end of 1975 there were 20 000 Algerian soldiers in the Spanish Sahara or in the neighboring Tindouf zone 23 According to the Red Cross about 40 000 refugees were fleeing eastward to escape the advancing Moroccan forces 15 Battle edit nbsp Soviet manufactured 2K12 Kvadrat SA 6B Gainful missile batteries in Baghdad Reporters were shown missiles with Algerian army markings at Amgala after the battle In January 1976 the Amgala waterhole was being used as a staging point for refugees being evacuated to Algeria assisted by Algerian troops 24 According to the Algerians their troops were supplying refugees with food and medical supplies The Moroccans said that the Algerians were heavily armed with field guns mortars anti aircraft guns and missiles 4 Some sources say Polisario fighters were present at Amgala and Algeria had supplied an SA 6 antiaircraft battery with trained Algerian operators so Polisario could fend off Moroccan aircraft that were using napalm bombs 25 26 27 The Moroccans showed reporters Soviet made missiles with Algerian army markings at the site a few days after the battle 4 On the night of 27 January Moroccan troops surprised the Algerian troops at Amgala 4 The subsequent engagement lasted for 36 hours According to Moroccan sources about 1 200 men were involved in the battle including Algerian soldiers and Sahrawi militia men The Algerians withdrew on 29 January 11 A Polisario spokesman said 440 Moroccans were killed A Moroccan spokesman said only two of the attackers died and fourteen were wounded while about 200 Algerians were killed and 109 captured 4 The Moroccans said they also captured twelve Sahrawis from the Polisario Front 11 The Algerian newspaper El Moudjahid claimed 400 Moroccan deaths and went on to say Algeria would have chosen more effective weapons and a more strategic location than the Western Sahara if the intent had been to attack Morocco 3 International Red Cross officials confirmed the number of Algerian prisoners when they visited them in their place of detention near Rabat 4 Aftermath editThe day after the attack on 28 January Algerian President Houari Boumediene sent messages to heads of state around the world To leaders of the non aligned countries he said that Algeria was concerned only with the right to self determination of their brothers and neighbors in Western Sahara who were facing what amounted to genocide To the socialists he talked of the Moroccan imperialist strategy in the region To the western leaders he talked of the right to a free and fair referendum to determine the future of the country Algeria also presented their position to the United Nations and its Security Council and held a series of meetings with Arab leaders Egypt took the most active role in the follow up diplomacy calling for an immediate cease fire and a meeting between the heads of state of Morocco Algeria and Egypt to resolve the issue but this was not accepted 28 Algeria started to provide arms and training to Polisario forces 24 On 3 February 1976 Morocco declared that it was willing to submit its dispute with Algeria to arbitration by the Arab League the Organization of Arab Unity or the United Nations The U N Secretary General appointed Olof Rydbeck the Swedish ambassador to the U N as a mediator Rydbeck s appointment was welcomed by Algeria but treated with reserve by Morocco He visited Western Sahara between 7 and 11 February visiting El Aaiun Dakhla and Smara 28 Although he talked to some local people he was not able to meet Polisario representatives 29 While this diplomacy was continuing Morocco and Mauritania were completing their occupation of the territory On 12 February 1976 the Moroccan army occupied Al Mahbes a community 50 kilometres 31 mi from the Algerian border that commanded the route to Tindouf Polisario could not hope to defeat the Moroccan army in open battle so adopted a guerilla policy of raids and withdrawals to create a zone of insecurity 29 Renewed fighting flared up at Amgala in February 1976 30 In an engagement on the night of 14 15 February a force attacked the garrison that Morocco had left at Amgala causing several dozen deaths see Second Battle of Amgala 31 The Moroccan garrison was almost wiped out 32 Hassan II of Morocco immediately accused Algeria of involvement in the attack saying the Algerians had used heavy weapons in numbers conceived for annihilation Algeria denied that they had participated and said only Polisario forces had been involved 4 These two engagements at Amgala are the only two cases where Algerian and Moroccan troops came into conflict during the Western Sahara War 33 There were many stories of later Algerian involvement but there was no proof since no Algerian prisoners were taken after Amgala 16 In Addis Ababa later that month Algeria worked for recognition of the Polisario Front by the Organisation of African Unity 34 Spain officially withdrew from the territory on 27 February 1976 and that day Polisario formally proclaimed the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic SADR 8 Algeria recognized SADR on 6 March 1976 The next day Morocco broke off diplomatic relations with Algeria 34 Later in the spring of 1976 Polisario regained Amgala Morocco took the position once again in May 1977 24 Ten years later with a thawing of relations between Algeria and Morocco on 25 May 1987 one hundred and fifty Moroccan prisoners of war were exchanged for 102 Algerian soldiers captured during the Battle of Amgala in 1976 35 Further serious fighting occurred at the oasis in the second Battle of Amgala when Polisario fighters attacked and temporarily defeated a relatively small number of Moroccan troops before retreating only to lose the territory to Moroccans again 36 Civilian casualties and military abuses editIn April 2013 specialists from the University of the Basque Country and the Aranzadi Science Society were contacted by Saharawi families of victims to investigate the discovery of human remains in the Fadret area near Amgala DNA tests and a forensic investigation are being carried out by this team which is also investigating the circumstances of their deaths The team concluded in September 2013 that 8 Sahrawi civilians including 2 children had been arrested in February 1976 by a Moroccan military patrol and executed by gunfire before being buried on the spot 37 Dr Carlos Martin Beristain then concluded The fact of finding their remains on the spot is symptomatic of extrajudicial executions 38 However the Equity and Reconciliation Commission IER launched by the Moroccan authorities in 2004 to investigate enforced disappearances and other violations had given no information on the fate of the eight people The Consultative Council on Human Rights CCDH a national body for the protection and promotion of human rights which had carried out an investigation into four of the eight persons who had been reported missing had concluded that the four persons had been arrested by Moroccan soldiers near Amgala in February June and July 1976 The CCDH claims that the four were taken to the military barracks in Smara where they later died 37 A former Moroccan soldier M barek Daoudi who served more than 33 years in the Moroccan army and retired in 2008 said in an interview that he witnessed the execution of two Sahrawi women in the Amgala area on 12 February 1976 38 References editNotes The term Western Sahara is used here in the geographical sense In theory Western Sahara was under Spanish administration until 27 February 1976 8 Moroccan forces occupied Smara on 27 November 1975 and they and the Mauritanians progressively took over the rest of the Western Saharan settlements in the weeks that followed The last Spanish troops left from Villa Cisneros on 12 January 1976 9 After that control of the region was and still is disputed 8 Citations Rodrigue 2011 p 69 Barbier 2003 p 185 a b c Cuatrocientos muertos 1976 a b c d e f g h Hughes 2006 p 252 La polemique continue entre Alger et Rabat sur la seconde bataille d Amgala Le Monde 18 February 1976 Retrieved 20 July 2020 Abdelhak El Merini L armee marocaine a travers l Histoire Dar Nachr Al Maarifa 2000 p 421 ISBN 9981 808 42 3 Mohsen Finan Khadija 23 April 2015 Conflit du Sahara occidental de la guerilla au gel durable Orient XXI in French Retrieved 11 May 2021 a b c Chatty 2010 p 42 a b c Thompson Thompson amp Adloff 1980 p 176 Hollowell 2009 p 11 a b c Argelia acusa 1976 a b c d Suksi 1993 p 257 a b Naylor 2006 p 384 a b McDonald amp Fischer 2005 p 376 a b Jensen 2005 p 29 a b Zartman 1990 p 44 Callahan amp Shillington 2001 p 560 Pieroni amp Vandebroek 2009 p 246 247 Rauschning Wiesbrock amp Lailach 1997 p 186 Cuervo 2006 p 213 Jensen 2005 p 28 Berramdane 1992 p 61 62 Zartman 1990 p 43 a b c Mikaberidze 2011 p 96 Milestones Pennell 2000 p 340 Brzoska amp Pearson 1994 p 164 a b Barbier 2003 p 186 187 a b Barbier 2003 p 188 Berramdane 1992 p 61 Barbier 2003 p 189 San Martin 1976 Thompson Thompson amp Adloff 1980 p 239 a b Berramdane 1992 p 62 France Libertes 2003 p 16 Basco 1989 a b De nouvelles revelations sur des disparitions de Sahraouis soulignent le manque de verite et de justice Amnistie internationale Canada francophone in French Retrieved 23 July 2020 a b Sahara occidental L exhumation qui confronte le Maroc a ses responsabilites L Humanite in French 17 February 2014 Retrieved 23 July 2020 Sources Argelia acusa la derrota de Angola ABC in Spanish 41 7 February 1976 Retrieved 24 July 2012 Barbier Maurice June 2003 Le conflit du Sahara occidental Reedition d un livre paru en 1982 in French Harmattan ISBN 978 2 296 27877 6 Retrieved 23 July 2012 Basco Sebastian 9 November 1989 Tercera gran ofensiva del Polisario en menos de un mes ABC Madrid 34 Retrieved 23 July 2012 unreliable source Berramdane Abdelkhaleq 1992 Le Sahara occidental in French KARTHALA Editions ISBN 978 2 86537 352 9 Retrieved 22 July 2012 Brzoska Michael Pearson Frederic S 1994 Arms and Warfare Escalation De Escalation and Negotiation Univ of South Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 87249 982 9 Retrieved 23 July 2012 Callahan Bryan Shillington Kevin 2001 Peoples of Africa Togo Zimbabwe Marshall Cavendish ISBN 978 0 7614 7168 4 Retrieved 23 July 2012 Chatty Dawn 3 May 2010 Deterritorialized Youth Sahrawi and Afghan Refugees at the Margins of the Middle East Berghahn Books ISBN 978 1 84545 653 5 Retrieved 23 July 2012 Cuatrocientos muertos marroquies en la Batalla de Amgala in Spanish ABC Sevilla 3 February 1976 Retrieved 11 May 2021 Cuervo Jose Ignacio Alguero July 2006 El Sahara y Espana Claves de una descolonizacion pendiente in Spanish Ediciones IDEA ISBN 978 84 96640 31 3 Las condiciones de detencion de los prisioneros de guerra marroquis detenidos en Tindouf Argelia PDF in Spanish Fundacion France Libertes July 2003 Retrieved 24 July 2012 Hollowell Thomas 15 June 2009 Allah s Garden Allah s Garden A True Story ISBN 978 0 9641423 9 8 Retrieved 22 July 2012 Hughes Stephen O 1 March 2006 Morocco Under King Hassan Garnet amp Ithaca Press ISBN 978 0 86372 312 4 Retrieved 23 July 2012 Jensen Erik 2005 Western Sahara Anatomy of a Stalemate Lynne Rienner Publishers ISBN 978 1 58826 305 6 Retrieved 23 July 2012 McDonald Avril Fischer Horst March 2005 Yearbook of International Humanitarian Law Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 90 6704 189 8 Mikaberidze Alexander 31 July 2011 Amgala Battles of 1976 1979 Conflict and Conquest in the Islamic World A Historical Encyclopedia ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 59884 336 1 Retrieved 23 July 2012 Milestones in the Western Sahara Conflict United Nations Mission for the Referendum in Western Sahara Archived from the original on 31 July 2012 Retrieved 22 July 2012 Naylor Phillip Chiviges 2006 Historical Dictionary of Algeria Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 5340 9 Retrieved 23 July 2012 Pennell C R 2000 Morocco Since 1830 A History NYU Press ISBN 978 0 8147 6677 4 Retrieved 23 July 2012 Pieroni Andrea Vandebroek Ina 1 October 2009 Traveling Cultures and Plants The Ethnobiology and Ethnopharmacy of Human Migrations Berghahn Books ISBN 978 1 84545 679 5 Retrieved 23 July 2012 Rauschning Dietrich Wiesbrock Katja Lailach Martin 28 August 1997 3458 XXX Question of Spanish Sahara Key Resolutions of the United Nations General Assembly 1946 1996 CUP Archive ISBN 978 0 521 59704 3 Retrieved 23 July 2012 Rodrigue Alain 1 October 2011 La Seguia el Hamra Contribution a l etude de la prehistoire du Sahara Occidental L Harmattan ISBN 978 2 296 56232 5 Retrieved 23 July 2012 San Martin Eduardo 8 May 1976 El rearme del ejercito un peligro para el trono marroqui El Pais in Spanish Retrieved 24 July 2012 unreliable source Suksi Markku 1993 Bringing in the People A Comparison of Constitutional Forms and Practices of the Referendum Martinus Nijhoff Publishers ISBN 978 0 7923 2208 5 Retrieved 23 July 2012 Thompson Virginia McLean Thompson Virginia Adloff Richard 1980 The Western Saharans Background to Conflict Croom Helm ISBN 978 0 389 20148 9 Retrieved 23 July 2012 Zartman Ira William 1990 La resolution des conflits en Afrique in French Ed l Harmattan ISBN 978 2 7384 0393 3 Retrieved 23 July 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title First Battle of Amgala amp oldid 1215735699, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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