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Sahrawi refugee camps

The Sahrawi refugee camps (Arabic: مخيمات اللاجئين الصحراويين; Spanish: Campamentos de refugiados saharauis), also known as the Tindouf camps, are a collection of refugee camps set up in the Tindouf Province, Algeria in 1975–76 for Sahrawi refugees fleeing from Moroccan forces, who advanced through Western Sahara during the Western Sahara War. With most of the original refugees still living in the camps, the situation is among the most protracted in the world.[1][2]

Refugee camp in Tindouf.

The limited opportunities for self-reliance in the harsh desert environment have forced the refugees to rely on international humanitarian assistance for their survival.[3] However, the Tindouf camps differ from the majority of refugee camps in the level of self-organization. Most affairs and camp life organization are run by the refugees themselves, with little outside interference.[4]

The camps are divided into five wilayat (districts) named after towns in Western Sahara; El Aaiun, Awserd, Smara, Dakhla and more recently Cape Bojador (or the daira of Bojador).[5][6] In addition, there is a smaller satellite camp known as "February 27", surrounding a boarding school for women, and an administrative camp called Rabouni.[7] The encampments are spread out over a quite large area. While Laayoune, Smara, Awserd, February 27 and Rabouni all lie within an hour's drive of the Algerian city of Tindouf, the Dakhla camp lies 170 km to the southeast. The camps are also the headquarters of the 6th military region of the Saharawi Arab Democratic Republic.

Administration and public service institutions edit

 
Map of the camps close to Tindouf. Not shown: Dakhla.

The refugee camps are governed by Polisario, being administratively part of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR). SADR's government in exile and administration are located in the Rabouni camp.[2] The Tindouf camps are divided into administrative sub-units electing their own officials to represent the neighbourhoods in political decision-making. Each of the four wilayas (districts) are divided into six or seven daïras (villages),[5] which are in turn divided into hays or barrios (neighborhoods).[5]

Local committees distribute basic goods, water and food, while "daïra" authorities made up by the representatives of the "hays" organize schools, cultural activities and medical services. Some argue that this results in a form of basic democracy on the level of camp administration, and that this has improved the efficiency of aid distribution.[citation needed] Women are active on several levels of administration, and UNHCR has appraised their importance in camp administration and social structures.[8]

Algeria does not intervene in their organization.[9] While the Algerian military has a significant presence in the nearby city of Tindouf, Algeria insists that responsibility for human rights in the camps lies with the Polisario.[2]

Camp residents are subject to the constitution and laws of SADR. A local justice system, with courts and prisons, is administered by Polisario. Local qadis (sharia judges) have jurisdiction over personal status and family law issues.[2]

Polisario has prioritised education from the beginning,[7] and the local authorities have established 29 preschools, 31 primary and seven secondary schools, the academic institutions of ‘27 February’ and ‘12 October’ as well as various technical training centres (without forgetting that Tindouf campements count 90.000 refugees) .[3] While teaching materials are still scarce, the literacy rate has increased from about 5% at the formation of the camps to 90% in 1995.[5] Children's education is obligatory,[7] and several thousands have received university educations in Algeria, Cuba[10] and Spain as part of aid packages.

The camps have 27 clinics, a central hospital and four regional hospitals.[3]

Men perform military service in the armed forces of the SADR. During the war years, at least some women were enrolled in auxiliary units guarding the refugee camps.

Population numbers edit

The number of Sahrawi refugees in Tindouf camps is disputed and politically sensitive. Morocco argues that Polisario and Algeria overestimate the numbers to attract political attention and foreign aid, while Polisario accuses Morocco of attempting to restrict human aid as a means of pressure on civilian refugee populations. The refugees' numbers will also be important in determining their political weight in the possible event of a referendum to determine Western Sahara's future status.

Algerian authorities have estimated the number of Sahrawi refugees in Algeria to be 165,000. This has been supported by Polisario, although the movement recognizes that some refugees have rebased to Mauritania, a country that houses about 26,000 Sahrawis refugees.[11][12] UNHCR referred to Algeria's figure for many years, but in 2005 concern about it being inflated led the organization to reduce its working figure to 90,000 based on satellite imagery analysis.[1][13] UNHCR is in dialogue with the Algerian Government and the Sahrawi refugee leadership, seeking to conduct a census to determine the exact number of refugees in the camps.[1]

In 1998, UN's Minurso mission identified 42,378 voting-age adults in the camps, counting only those who had contacted the mission's registration offices and subsequently been able to prove their descent from pre-1975 Western Sahara. No attempt was made to estimate the total population number in the camps.[14]

The Moroccan government contends that the total number of refugees is around 45,000 to 50,000, and also that these people are kept in the camps by Polisario against their will.[15] However, the Central Intelligence Agency notes that there are about 100,000 refugees in Algerian sponsored camps near the town of Tindouf alone.[16]

Living conditions edit

 
View of the 27 February camp after the floods that devastated the camps in February 2006
 
"USAID-supplied bread flour being distributed to mothers and children in Dakhla refugee camp. (January 18–25, 2004)

The Tindouf area is located on the hammada, a vast desert plain of the Sahara Desert. Summer temperatures in this part of the hammada, historically known as "The Devil's Garden", are often above 50°C and frequent sand storms disrupt normal life. There is little or no vegetation, and firewood has to be gathered by car tens of kilometers away. Only a few of the camps have access to water, and the drinking sources are neither clean nor sufficient for the entire refugee population. Basic life cannot be sustained in this environment, and the camps are completely dependent on foreign aid.

Food, drinking water, building materials and clothing are brought in by car by international aid agencies.[2] Basic food is brought in from the port of Oran to Rabouni by the World Food Programme (WFP) in collaboration with Algerian Red Crescent (ARC) and the Algerian government, while food distribution from Rabouni is organized by Polisario in collaboration with Western Sahara Red Crescent (WSRC).[3] With the rise of a basic market economy, some refugees have been able to acquire television sets and use cars; several hundred satellite dishes have popped up in recent years.

The refugee population is plagued by the lack of vegetables, nutritious food and medicines. According to the United Nations and the World Food Program, 40% of the children suffer from lack of iron, and 10% of the children below five years of age suffer from acute lack of nutrition. 32% are suffering from chronic lack of nutrition. 47% of the women suffer from lack of iron.[citation needed]

Heavy flash rains and floods destroyed much of the camps in February 2006, prompting a crisis response from the UNHCR and the World Food Program (WFP), to replace destroyed housing with tents and provide food to cover for lost storages.[17]

The WFP has repeatedly expressed its concern over a shortage of donations, and warned of dire health consequences if needs are not met.[18][19] The UNHCR warned in early 2007 that demands were not being met in the Sahrawi camps, and that malnutrition was severe.[20] Refugees International has noted that the situation is especially precarious in Dakhla, the most inaccessible of the camps.[21]

In October 2015, heavy rainfalls flooded the refugee camps again, destroying houses (made of sand-bricks), tents and food provisions. More than 11,000 families were affected.[22]

The European Commission refers to the Sahrawi refugees as the "forgotten refugees".[23]

Women's role edit

Polisario has attempted to modernize the camps' society, through emphasis on education, eradication of tribalism and emancipation of women.

The role of Sahrawi women was central already in pre-colonial and colonial life, but was strengthened further during the war years (1975–1991), when Sahrawi women ran most of the camps' administration, while the men were fighting at the front.[7] This, together with literacy and professional education classes, produced major advances in the role of women in Sahrawi society. The return of large numbers of Sahrawi men since the cease fire in 1991 may have slowed this development according to some observers, but women still run a majority of the camps' administration,[8] and the Sahrawi women's union UNMS is very active in promoting their role.

Two women who had been residents of the camps however claimed that women in the refugee camps are deprived of their fundamental rights and are victims of exclusion and sexual aggression.[24]

Work and economy edit

While there are several international organizations (ECHO, WFP, Oxfam, UNHCR etc.) working in the camps, the Polisario has insisted on using mainly local staff for construction, teaching etc.[citation needed] It argues that this will help activate the refugee population, to avoid a sense of stagnation and hopelessness after 30 years in exile.[citation needed] However, jobs remain scarce and those Sahrawis educated at universities abroad can rarely if ever find opportunities to use their skills.[citation needed] Some Sahrawis work in nearby Tindouf city.[citation needed]

A simple monetary economy began developing in the camps during the 1990s, after Spain decided to pay pensions to Sahrawis who had been forcibly drafted as soldiers in the Tropas Nómadas during the colonial time. Money also came from Sahrawis working in Algeria or abroad, and from refugees who pursue a traditional bedouin and tuareg lifestyle, herding cattle in Algeria, Mauritania and the Polisario-held areas of Western Sahara. The private economy however remains very limited, and the camps continue to survive mainly on foreign and Algerian aid.[25]

Family separation and human rights edit

Since the Polisario Front and Morocco are still at war, visits between the camps and the Moroccan-controlled parts of Western Sahara are virtually impossible, with the Moroccan Wall hindering movement through Western Sahara, and the Algeria–Morocco border closed added to the restriction on movement by the Polisario on the camps population. Thousands of families have been separated for up to 30 years, a painful situation for the population in both Western Sahara and the refugee camps. In 2004, UNHCR managed a family visits exchange program for five-day visits for a limited number of people, going from the camps to the Moroccan-held territories and vice versa.[26] The United Nations has also established telephone and mail services between the camps and Moroccan-held Western Sahara.[27]

While Polisario complains of repression of Sahrawi human rights activists in the Moroccan-held parts of Western Sahara; the government of Morocco, dissident groups inside Polisario, as well as former members of Polisario, have claimed that the refugee camps occasionally are the scene of human rights abuse against the refugee population by the Polisario.[citation needed]

The Polisario Front has acknowledged reports of mistreatment in the seventies and eighties, but deny the accusations of on-going abuse. Reports of beatings and torture, in many cases leading to death, of Moroccan prisoners of war who were formerly held in the camps were backed by some human rights organizations, which seems to have contributed to the release of the last of these prisoners by the summer of 2005. There are complaints of limitations on movement between the camps, with Morocco describing them as completely shut off from the outside world, but camp authorities maintain that this is untrue, and that they are simply engaged in registering movements for aid allocation purposes. Visiting human rights organizations have concluded that the conditions are troublesome with regard to basic subsistence, but that the human rights situation is satisfactory.[2][28][29] An OHCHR (United Nations' human rights monitors) visit to both Moroccan-controlled Western Sahara and the Tindouf refugee camps in 2006 documented no complaints of human rights abuse in the camps, but stressed the need for more information. However, the report, which severely criticized Moroccan conduct in Western Sahara, was slammed as biased and partisan by the Moroccan government.[30] In April 2010, the Sahrawi government had called the UN to supervise human rights in the liberated territories and refugee camps, stating that "We are ready to fully cooperate with UN human rights observers in the territory under our control. The United Nations should take this proposal seriously, and ask Morocco to do likewise".[31]

2011 NGO foreign workers abduction edit

On 23 October 2011, three European humanitarian aid workers were kidnapped in the Rabuni, the administrative center of the refugee camps. The three hostages were two Spanish citizens (Enric Gonyalons and Ainhoa Fernández de Rincón) and an Italian woman (Rossella Urru); all members of humanitarian NGOs.[32] During the abduction, Enric Gonyalons and a Sahrawi guard were wounded by the attackers, who according to POLISARIO sources came from Mali.[33]

At first, Brahim Gali, SADR ambassador in Algiers, said that Al-Qaeda Organization in the Islamic Maghreb (AQMI) was responsible for this incident.[32] Mauritanian and Malian security sources also pointed to AQMI as perpetrators of the kidnapping.[34][35]

On 26 October, Algerian Army forces killed four AQMI members, suspects of the kidnappings.[36]

The kidnapping was widely condemned internationally, for example by the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights[37] or the European Union.[38]

They were set free by the Movement for Oneness and Jihad in West Africa (MOJWA) in Gao, Mali on the 18th of July 2012, being transferred to Burkina Faso and later to Spain.[39]

Impact edit

Poets Hadjatu Aliat Swelm and Hossein Moulud have written about life at the Gdeim Izik protest camp.[40] Najla Mohamed-Lamin was recognised as one of the BBC's 100 women in 2023.[41]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "UNHCR Algeria Factsheet". UNHCR. 2010-08-01. from the original on 2011-07-19. Retrieved 2011-06-26.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Eric Goldstein; Bill Van Esveld, eds. (2008). Human Rights in Western Sahara and in the Tindouf Refugee Camps. Human Rights Watch. p. 216. ISBN 978-1-56432-420-7. from the original on 2015-06-13. Retrieved 2016-12-04.
  3. ^ a b c d "Protracted Relief and Recovery Operation (PRRO) Algeria, PRRO 200034" (PDF). World Food Programme. (PDF) from the original on 2011-10-07. Retrieved 2011-06-26.
  4. ^ Van Brunt Smith, Danielle (August 2004). "Causes and consequences" (PDF). FMO Research Guide, Western Sahara. FMO, Refugee Studies Centre, University of Oxford: 12–19. from the original on 2012-07-28. Retrieved 2012-12-06.
  5. ^ a b c d Western Sahara. Living in the refugee camps. OXFAM Belgium and Comite belge de soutien au peuple sahraoui. 1995. from the original on 2007-10-30. Retrieved 2007-11-19.
  6. ^ Fiddian-Qasmiyeh, Elena (May 2011). "Protracted Sahrawi displacement" (PDF). Refugee Studies Centre.
  7. ^ a b c d Gina Crivello; Elena Fiddian; Dawn Chatty (December 2005). "Background to the Western Sahara Conflict". FMO, Refugee Studies Centre, University of Oxford. from the original on 2011-07-24. Retrieved 2007-11-19.
  8. ^ a b "Country Operations Plan: Algeria. Planning year: 2007" (PDF). UNHCR. 2006. (PDF) from the original on 2007-06-12. Retrieved 2007-11-19.
  9. ^ Nadja Furlan Stante, Anja Zalta, Maja Lamberger Khatib (2018). Women against war system. LIT Verlag Münster. p. 139. ISBN 978-3-643-90918-3.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  10. ^ "Western Saharan refugee students in Cuba". ARSO / UNHCR. September 2005. from the original on 2007-10-31. Retrieved 2007-11-19.
  11. ^ . 2009. Archived from the original on 2013-06-04.
  12. ^ "UNHCR Global Report, Mauritania, p. 153". 2009. from the original on 2012-10-15. Retrieved 2011-06-26.
  13. ^ "Western Sahara (Report on Human Rights Practices)". USSD. 2007. Retrieved 2017-06-25.
  14. ^ . MINURSO. Archived from the original on 2007-02-19.
  15. ^ "Country of Origin Information Report. Algeria" (PDF). UK Border Agency. 2008-09-30. (PDF) from the original on 2011-07-16. Retrieved 2011-06-26.
  16. ^ "Africa :: Algeria — The World Factbook - Central Intelligence Agency". www.cia.gov. Retrieved 2020-04-18.
  17. ^ "WFP assists Sahrawi refugees hit by torrential rains". World Food Programme. 2006-02-16. from the original on 2011-05-20. Retrieved 2011-06-26.
  18. ^ "Sahrawi plight must not be forgotten, warns WFP chief". WFP. 2006-11-13. from the original on 2011-06-17. Retrieved 2011-06-26.
  19. ^ "Shortage of donations impact Sahrawi refugees in Algeria". 2006-10-26. from the original on 2011-06-17. Retrieved 2011-06-26.
  20. ^ "UNHCR-WFP team finds dire health conditions in Algerian refugee camps". UNHCR. 2007-02-12. from the original on 2007-06-12. Retrieved 2007-11-19.
  21. ^ . Archived from the original on September 28, 2007.
  22. ^ "Heavy rainfalls damage Sahrawi refugee camps". Oxfam Solidarity, 22/10/2015. http://www.oxfamsol.be/fr/crise-des-refugies-sahraouis-des-inondations-ravagent-les-camps 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine
  23. ^ "Algeria". 3 October 2013. from the original on 2018-04-26. Retrieved 2018-04-25.
  24. ^ "Menara - Menara.ma, le portail du Maroc - actualité, offres d'emploi, petites annonces, pages Jaunes, musique, blogs, cinéma - Menara.ma". from the original on 2014-09-15. Retrieved 2014-09-14.
  25. ^ Van Brunt Smith, Danielle (August 2004). "Needs and responses" (PDF). FMO Research Guide, Western Sahara. FMO, Refugee Studies Centre, University of Oxford: 19–22. from the original on 2012-07-28. Retrieved 2012-12-06.
  26. ^ "Western Sahara: UN's family visits exchange scheme set to shift to second city". 2004-04-02. from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2017-06-29.
  27. ^ "UNHCR and MINURSO initiate confidence building measures in Western Sahara". 2003-03-29. from the original on 2013-03-09. Retrieved 2017-06-29.
  28. ^ "Fact-Finding Mission to Algiers and the Sahrawi Refugee Camps Near Tindouf, Algeria". Canadian Lawyers Association For International Human Rights (CLAIHR). June 1997. from the original on 2007-11-08. Retrieved 2007-11-19.
  29. ^ "Keeping it secret. The United Nations operation in the Western Sahara". Human Rights Watch. 1995. from the original on 2016-03-05. Retrieved 2016-12-04.
  30. ^ "Report of the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) about the mission of May/June 2006 in Western Sahara and Algeria". OHCHR. 2006. from the original on 2007-10-11. Retrieved 2007-11-19.
  31. ^ "Polisario calls on UN to supervise human rights in territories under its control". Sahara Press Service. 2010-04-06. from the original on 2012-03-26. Retrieved 2011-06-26.
  32. ^ a b AFP (23 October 2011). "Le Polisario accuse Aqmi d'avoir enlevé trois Européens dans un camp sahraoui". France24. from the original on 24 December 2011. Retrieved 7 December 2011.
  33. ^ Aid workers kidnapped from Tindouf camp 2012-11-07 at the Wayback Machine Magharebia, 25 October 2011
  34. ^ Aid workers snatched from Sahrawi camp 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine Magharebia, 24 October 2011
  35. ^ AQIM likely responsible for Tindouf kidnappings 2012-08-31 at the Wayback Machine Magharebia, 2 November 2011
  36. ^ Algerian soldiers kill four suspected of kidnapping Spanish aid workers 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine El País, 26 October 2011
  37. ^ Communiqué on the abduction of three humanitarian NGO workers from Sahrawi Refugee Camps 2013-01-19 at the Wayback Machine Achpr.org, 31 October 2011
  38. ^ Answer given by High Representative/Vice-President Ashton on behalf of the Commission European Parliament, 22 February 2012
  39. ^ Spaniards freed by terrorists in Mali after nine months 2012-08-02 at the Wayback Machine El País, 18 July 2012
  40. ^ Berkson, Samuel; Sulaiman, Mohamed (2015). Settled Wanderers. London: Influx Press, pp. 44, 48.
  41. ^ . Algeria Press Service (in French). 21 November 2023. Archived from the original on 4 December 2023. Retrieved 21 February 2024.

External links edit

  • Photos from the Sahrawi refugee camps in Tindouf and from the "liberated territories" in Western Sahara, by Nacho Hernandez.
  • Photo gallery: Life in the Tindouf refugee camps, by Danielle Van Brunt Smith. 2011-08-09 at the Wayback Machine
  • Eye witness report from Tindouf By ECHO, the EU:s foreign aid branch.
  • Article about the 35th anniversary of the proclamation of SADR, held in the Tindouf camps and Tifariti
  • Map of the region (anonymous).
  • The United States on Algeria 2004-08-17 at the Wayback Machine.
  • Opinion Editorial by Paul de Bendern, February 2004. 2004-08-16 at the Wayback Machine

sahrawi, refugee, camps, arabic, مخيمات, اللاجئين, الصحراويين, spanish, campamentos, refugiados, saharauis, also, known, tindouf, camps, collection, refugee, camps, tindouf, province, algeria, 1975, sahrawi, refugees, fleeing, from, moroccan, forces, advanced,. The Sahrawi refugee camps Arabic مخيمات اللاجئين الصحراويين Spanish Campamentos de refugiados saharauis also known as the Tindouf camps are a collection of refugee camps set up in the Tindouf Province Algeria in 1975 76 for Sahrawi refugees fleeing from Moroccan forces who advanced through Western Sahara during the Western Sahara War With most of the original refugees still living in the camps the situation is among the most protracted in the world 1 2 Refugee camp in Tindouf The limited opportunities for self reliance in the harsh desert environment have forced the refugees to rely on international humanitarian assistance for their survival 3 However the Tindouf camps differ from the majority of refugee camps in the level of self organization Most affairs and camp life organization are run by the refugees themselves with little outside interference 4 The camps are divided into five wilayat districts named after towns in Western Sahara El Aaiun Awserd Smara Dakhla and more recently Cape Bojador or the daira of Bojador 5 6 In addition there is a smaller satellite camp known as February 27 surrounding a boarding school for women and an administrative camp called Rabouni 7 The encampments are spread out over a quite large area While Laayoune Smara Awserd February 27 and Rabouni all lie within an hour s drive of the Algerian city of Tindouf the Dakhla camp lies 170 km to the southeast The camps are also the headquarters of the 6th military region of the Saharawi Arab Democratic Republic Contents 1 Administration and public service institutions 2 Population numbers 3 Living conditions 4 Women s role 5 Work and economy 6 Family separation and human rights 7 2011 NGO foreign workers abduction 8 Impact 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksAdministration and public service institutions edit nbsp Map of the camps close to Tindouf Not shown Dakhla The refugee camps are governed by Polisario being administratively part of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic SADR SADR s government in exile and administration are located in the Rabouni camp 2 The Tindouf camps are divided into administrative sub units electing their own officials to represent the neighbourhoods in political decision making Each of the four wilayas districts are divided into six or seven dairas villages 5 which are in turn divided into hays or barrios neighborhoods 5 Local committees distribute basic goods water and food while daira authorities made up by the representatives of the hays organize schools cultural activities and medical services Some argue that this results in a form of basic democracy on the level of camp administration and that this has improved the efficiency of aid distribution citation needed Women are active on several levels of administration and UNHCR has appraised their importance in camp administration and social structures 8 Algeria does not intervene in their organization 9 While the Algerian military has a significant presence in the nearby city of Tindouf Algeria insists that responsibility for human rights in the camps lies with the Polisario 2 Camp residents are subject to the constitution and laws of SADR A local justice system with courts and prisons is administered by Polisario Local qadis sharia judges have jurisdiction over personal status and family law issues 2 Polisario has prioritised education from the beginning 7 and the local authorities have established 29 preschools 31 primary and seven secondary schools the academic institutions of 27 February and 12 October as well as various technical training centres without forgetting that Tindouf campements count 90 000 refugees 3 While teaching materials are still scarce the literacy rate has increased from about 5 at the formation of the camps to 90 in 1995 5 Children s education is obligatory 7 and several thousands have received university educations in Algeria Cuba 10 and Spain as part of aid packages The camps have 27 clinics a central hospital and four regional hospitals 3 Men perform military service in the armed forces of the SADR During the war years at least some women were enrolled in auxiliary units guarding the refugee camps Population numbers editMain article Sahrawi refugees The number of Sahrawi refugees in Tindouf camps is disputed and politically sensitive Morocco argues that Polisario and Algeria overestimate the numbers to attract political attention and foreign aid while Polisario accuses Morocco of attempting to restrict human aid as a means of pressure on civilian refugee populations The refugees numbers will also be important in determining their political weight in the possible event of a referendum to determine Western Sahara s future status Algerian authorities have estimated the number of Sahrawi refugees in Algeria to be 165 000 This has been supported by Polisario although the movement recognizes that some refugees have rebased to Mauritania a country that houses about 26 000 Sahrawis refugees 11 12 UNHCR referred to Algeria s figure for many years but in 2005 concern about it being inflated led the organization to reduce its working figure to 90 000 based on satellite imagery analysis 1 13 UNHCR is in dialogue with the Algerian Government and the Sahrawi refugee leadership seeking to conduct a census to determine the exact number of refugees in the camps 1 In 1998 UN s Minurso mission identified 42 378 voting age adults in the camps counting only those who had contacted the mission s registration offices and subsequently been able to prove their descent from pre 1975 Western Sahara No attempt was made to estimate the total population number in the camps 14 The Moroccan government contends that the total number of refugees is around 45 000 to 50 000 and also that these people are kept in the camps by Polisario against their will 15 However the Central Intelligence Agency notes that there are about 100 000 refugees in Algerian sponsored camps near the town of Tindouf alone 16 Living conditions edit nbsp View of the 27 February camp after the floods that devastated the camps in February 2006 nbsp USAID supplied bread flour being distributed to mothers and children in Dakhla refugee camp January 18 25 2004 The Tindouf area is located on the hammada a vast desert plain of the Sahara Desert Summer temperatures in this part of the hammada historically known as The Devil s Garden are often above 50 C and frequent sand storms disrupt normal life There is little or no vegetation and firewood has to be gathered by car tens of kilometers away Only a few of the camps have access to water and the drinking sources are neither clean nor sufficient for the entire refugee population Basic life cannot be sustained in this environment and the camps are completely dependent on foreign aid Food drinking water building materials and clothing are brought in by car by international aid agencies 2 Basic food is brought in from the port of Oran to Rabouni by the World Food Programme WFP in collaboration with Algerian Red Crescent ARC and the Algerian government while food distribution from Rabouni is organized by Polisario in collaboration with Western Sahara Red Crescent WSRC 3 With the rise of a basic market economy some refugees have been able to acquire television sets and use cars several hundred satellite dishes have popped up in recent years The refugee population is plagued by the lack of vegetables nutritious food and medicines According to the United Nations and the World Food Program 40 of the children suffer from lack of iron and 10 of the children below five years of age suffer from acute lack of nutrition 32 are suffering from chronic lack of nutrition 47 of the women suffer from lack of iron citation needed Heavy flash rains and floods destroyed much of the camps in February 2006 prompting a crisis response from the UNHCR and the World Food Program WFP to replace destroyed housing with tents and provide food to cover for lost storages 17 The WFP has repeatedly expressed its concern over a shortage of donations and warned of dire health consequences if needs are not met 18 19 The UNHCR warned in early 2007 that demands were not being met in the Sahrawi camps and that malnutrition was severe 20 Refugees International has noted that the situation is especially precarious in Dakhla the most inaccessible of the camps 21 In October 2015 heavy rainfalls flooded the refugee camps again destroying houses made of sand bricks tents and food provisions More than 11 000 families were affected 22 The European Commission refers to the Sahrawi refugees as the forgotten refugees 23 Women s role editFurther information Sahrawi women Polisario has attempted to modernize the camps society through emphasis on education eradication of tribalism and emancipation of women The role of Sahrawi women was central already in pre colonial and colonial life but was strengthened further during the war years 1975 1991 when Sahrawi women ran most of the camps administration while the men were fighting at the front 7 This together with literacy and professional education classes produced major advances in the role of women in Sahrawi society The return of large numbers of Sahrawi men since the cease fire in 1991 may have slowed this development according to some observers but women still run a majority of the camps administration 8 and the Sahrawi women s union UNMS is very active in promoting their role Two women who had been residents of the camps however claimed that women in the refugee camps are deprived of their fundamental rights and are victims of exclusion and sexual aggression 24 Work and economy editWhile there are several international organizations ECHO WFP Oxfam UNHCR etc working in the camps the Polisario has insisted on using mainly local staff for construction teaching etc citation needed It argues that this will help activate the refugee population to avoid a sense of stagnation and hopelessness after 30 years in exile citation needed However jobs remain scarce and those Sahrawis educated at universities abroad can rarely if ever find opportunities to use their skills citation needed Some Sahrawis work in nearby Tindouf city citation needed A simple monetary economy began developing in the camps during the 1990s after Spain decided to pay pensions to Sahrawis who had been forcibly drafted as soldiers in the Tropas Nomadas during the colonial time Money also came from Sahrawis working in Algeria or abroad and from refugees who pursue a traditional bedouin and tuareg lifestyle herding cattle in Algeria Mauritania and the Polisario held areas of Western Sahara The private economy however remains very limited and the camps continue to survive mainly on foreign and Algerian aid 25 Family separation and human rights editSince the Polisario Front and Morocco are still at war visits between the camps and the Moroccan controlled parts of Western Sahara are virtually impossible with the Moroccan Wall hindering movement through Western Sahara and the Algeria Morocco border closed added to the restriction on movement by the Polisario on the camps population Thousands of families have been separated for up to 30 years a painful situation for the population in both Western Sahara and the refugee camps In 2004 UNHCR managed a family visits exchange program for five day visits for a limited number of people going from the camps to the Moroccan held territories and vice versa 26 The United Nations has also established telephone and mail services between the camps and Moroccan held Western Sahara 27 While Polisario complains of repression of Sahrawi human rights activists in the Moroccan held parts of Western Sahara the government of Morocco dissident groups inside Polisario as well as former members of Polisario have claimed that the refugee camps occasionally are the scene of human rights abuse against the refugee population by the Polisario citation needed The Polisario Front has acknowledged reports of mistreatment in the seventies and eighties but deny the accusations of on going abuse Reports of beatings and torture in many cases leading to death of Moroccan prisoners of war who were formerly held in the camps were backed by some human rights organizations which seems to have contributed to the release of the last of these prisoners by the summer of 2005 There are complaints of limitations on movement between the camps with Morocco describing them as completely shut off from the outside world but camp authorities maintain that this is untrue and that they are simply engaged in registering movements for aid allocation purposes Visiting human rights organizations have concluded that the conditions are troublesome with regard to basic subsistence but that the human rights situation is satisfactory 2 28 29 An OHCHR United Nations human rights monitors visit to both Moroccan controlled Western Sahara and the Tindouf refugee camps in 2006 documented no complaints of human rights abuse in the camps but stressed the need for more information However the report which severely criticized Moroccan conduct in Western Sahara was slammed as biased and partisan by the Moroccan government 30 In April 2010 the Sahrawi government had called the UN to supervise human rights in the liberated territories and refugee camps stating that We are ready to fully cooperate with UN human rights observers in the territory under our control The United Nations should take this proposal seriously and ask Morocco to do likewise 31 2011 NGO foreign workers abduction editOn 23 October 2011 three European humanitarian aid workers were kidnapped in the Rabuni the administrative center of the refugee camps The three hostages were two Spanish citizens Enric Gonyalons and Ainhoa Fernandez de Rincon and an Italian woman Rossella Urru all members of humanitarian NGOs 32 During the abduction Enric Gonyalons and a Sahrawi guard were wounded by the attackers who according to POLISARIO sources came from Mali 33 At first Brahim Gali SADR ambassador in Algiers said that Al Qaeda Organization in the Islamic Maghreb AQMI was responsible for this incident 32 Mauritanian and Malian security sources also pointed to AQMI as perpetrators of the kidnapping 34 35 On 26 October Algerian Army forces killed four AQMI members suspects of the kidnappings 36 The kidnapping was widely condemned internationally for example by the African Commission on Human and Peoples Rights 37 or the European Union 38 They were set free by the Movement for Oneness and Jihad in West Africa MOJWA in Gao Mali on the 18th of July 2012 being transferred to Burkina Faso and later to Spain 39 Impact editPoets Hadjatu Aliat Swelm and Hossein Moulud have written about life at the Gdeim Izik protest camp 40 Najla Mohamed Lamin was recognised as one of the BBC s 100 women in 2023 41 See also edit nbsp Western Sahara portal History of Western Sahara The five cities in Western Sahara that give name to the refugee camps Dakhla El Aaiun Smara Awserd Cape Bojador Independence Intifada Western Sahara References edit a b c UNHCR Algeria Factsheet UNHCR 2010 08 01 Archived from the original on 2011 07 19 Retrieved 2011 06 26 a b c d e f Eric Goldstein Bill Van Esveld eds 2008 Human Rights in Western Sahara and in the Tindouf Refugee Camps Human Rights Watch p 216 ISBN 978 1 56432 420 7 Archived from the original on 2015 06 13 Retrieved 2016 12 04 a b c d Protracted Relief and Recovery Operation PRRO Algeria PRRO 200034 PDF World Food Programme Archived PDF from the original on 2011 10 07 Retrieved 2011 06 26 Van Brunt Smith Danielle August 2004 Causes and consequences PDF FMO Research Guide Western Sahara FMO Refugee Studies Centre University of Oxford 12 19 Archived from the original on 2012 07 28 Retrieved 2012 12 06 a b c d Western Sahara Living in the refugee camps OXFAM Belgium and Comite belge de soutien au peuple sahraoui 1995 Archived from the original on 2007 10 30 Retrieved 2007 11 19 Fiddian Qasmiyeh Elena May 2011 Protracted Sahrawi displacement PDF Refugee Studies Centre a b c d Gina Crivello Elena Fiddian Dawn Chatty December 2005 Background to the Western Sahara Conflict FMO Refugee Studies Centre University of Oxford Archived from the original on 2011 07 24 Retrieved 2007 11 19 a b Country Operations Plan Algeria Planning year 2007 PDF UNHCR 2006 Archived PDF from the original on 2007 06 12 Retrieved 2007 11 19 Nadja Furlan Stante Anja Zalta Maja Lamberger Khatib 2018 Women against war system LIT Verlag Munster p 139 ISBN 978 3 643 90918 3 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Western Saharan refugee students in Cuba ARSO UNHCR September 2005 Archived from the original on 2007 10 31 Retrieved 2007 11 19 USCRI World Refugee Survey 2009 Archived from the original on 2013 06 04 UNHCR Global Report Mauritania p 153 2009 Archived from the original on 2012 10 15 Retrieved 2011 06 26 Western Sahara Report on Human Rights Practices USSD 2007 Retrieved 2017 06 25 Identification of Eligible Voters MINURSO Archived from the original on 2007 02 19 Country of Origin Information Report Algeria PDF UK Border Agency 2008 09 30 Archived PDF from the original on 2011 07 16 Retrieved 2011 06 26 Africa Algeria The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency www cia gov Retrieved 2020 04 18 WFP assists Sahrawi refugees hit by torrential rains World Food Programme 2006 02 16 Archived from the original on 2011 05 20 Retrieved 2011 06 26 Sahrawi plight must not be forgotten warns WFP chief WFP 2006 11 13 Archived from the original on 2011 06 17 Retrieved 2011 06 26 Shortage of donations impact Sahrawi refugees in Algeria 2006 10 26 Archived from the original on 2011 06 17 Retrieved 2011 06 26 UNHCR WFP team finds dire health conditions in Algerian refugee camps UNHCR 2007 02 12 Archived from the original on 2007 06 12 Retrieved 2007 11 19 Dakhla Refugee Camp for Saharawis The Farthest Reaches of a Desert Wasteland Archived from the original on September 28 2007 Heavy rainfalls damage Sahrawi refugee camps Oxfam Solidarity 22 10 2015 http www oxfamsol be fr crise des refugies sahraouis des inondations ravagent les camps Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine Algeria 3 October 2013 Archived from the original on 2018 04 26 Retrieved 2018 04 25 Menara Menara ma le portail du Maroc actualite offres d emploi petites annonces pages Jaunes musique blogs cinema Menara ma Archived from the original on 2014 09 15 Retrieved 2014 09 14 Van Brunt Smith Danielle August 2004 Needs and responses PDF FMO Research Guide Western Sahara FMO Refugee Studies Centre University of Oxford 19 22 Archived from the original on 2012 07 28 Retrieved 2012 12 06 Western Sahara UN s family visits exchange scheme set to shift to second city 2004 04 02 Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2017 06 29 UNHCR and MINURSO initiate confidence building measures in Western Sahara 2003 03 29 Archived from the original on 2013 03 09 Retrieved 2017 06 29 Fact Finding Mission to Algiers and the Sahrawi Refugee Camps Near Tindouf Algeria Canadian Lawyers Association For International Human Rights CLAIHR June 1997 Archived from the original on 2007 11 08 Retrieved 2007 11 19 Keeping it secret The United Nations operation in the Western Sahara Human Rights Watch 1995 Archived from the original on 2016 03 05 Retrieved 2016 12 04 Report of the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights OHCHR about the mission of May June 2006 in Western Sahara and Algeria OHCHR 2006 Archived from the original on 2007 10 11 Retrieved 2007 11 19 Polisario calls on UN to supervise human rights in territories under its control Sahara Press Service 2010 04 06 Archived from the original on 2012 03 26 Retrieved 2011 06 26 a b AFP 23 October 2011 Le Polisario accuse Aqmi d avoir enleve trois Europeens dans un camp sahraoui France24 Archived from the original on 24 December 2011 Retrieved 7 December 2011 Aid workers kidnapped from Tindouf camp Archived 2012 11 07 at the Wayback Machine Magharebia 25 October 2011 Aid workers snatched from Sahrawi camp Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine Magharebia 24 October 2011 AQIM likely responsible for Tindouf kidnappings Archived 2012 08 31 at the Wayback Machine Magharebia 2 November 2011 Algerian soldiers kill four suspected of kidnapping Spanish aid workers Archived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine El Pais 26 October 2011 Communique on the abduction of three humanitarian NGO workers from Sahrawi Refugee Camps Archived 2013 01 19 at the Wayback Machine Achpr org 31 October 2011 Answer given by High Representative Vice President Ashton on behalf of the Commission European Parliament 22 February 2012 Spaniards freed by terrorists in Mali after nine months Archived 2012 08 02 at the Wayback Machine El Pais 18 July 2012 Berkson Samuel Sulaiman Mohamed 2015 Settled Wanderers London Influx Press pp 44 48 BBC la Sahraouie Najla Mohamed Lamin sur la liste des 100 femmes influentes de 2023 Algeria Press Service in French 21 November 2023 Archived from the original on 4 December 2023 Retrieved 21 February 2024 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sahrawi Refugee camps in Tindouf Province Photos from the Sahrawi refugee camps in Tindouf and from the liberated territories in Western Sahara by Nacho Hernandez Photo gallery Life in the Tindouf refugee camps by Danielle Van Brunt Smith Archived 2011 08 09 at the Wayback Machine Eye witness report from Tindouf By ECHO the EU s foreign aid branch Article about the 35th anniversary of the proclamation of SADR held in the Tindouf camps and Tifariti Map of the region anonymous The United States on Algeria Archived 2004 08 17 at the Wayback Machine Opinion Editorial by Paul de Bendern February 2004 Archived 2004 08 16 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sahrawi refugee camps amp oldid 1220987068, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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