Western Sahara

Society | Human rights

Society | Human rights

20,000 Western Sahara protesters "starving"

The Gdeim Izik protest camp outside El Aaiun is the largest, with over 10,000 campers © UPES/afrol News

The 20,000 Sahrawis leaving Western Sahara cities in protest of Morocco's occupation are on "maximum alert" after a Moroccan siege denies them water and food. Protesters warn of "concentration camps".

By now, some 20,000 Sahrawi protesters have gathered in provisional camps outside the cities of El Aaiun, Smara, Dakhla and Bujador, according to reports sent to afrol News from coordinators inside the camps. The massive protest action started in a smaller scale almost three weeks ago.



But as the protest grows more massive, Moroccan security forces get tougher. Protesters now report of a "Moroccan siege" of the camps, with massive build-ups of armed troops, police and vehicles encircling all the camps, halting all movement in and out of them.



The situation for the 20,000 Sahrawis is becoming critical. The Moroccan blockade of the four camps is preventing food, drinks and medicine from reaching those inside.



"Since early afternoon on Thursday, we don't have any water at all. Despite any possible measures to keep up hygienic standards and avoid disease outbreaks, the wall mounted by the Moroccans even prevents us from burning wastes outside the camp," a protester in the camp outside El Aaiun told afrol News.



Another protester added that isolation was now total for those concentrated in the protest camps, so that these camps now could "be labelled concentration camps where the population is starved to death."



The siege has already produced deaths and injured, according to Sahrawi sources. Earlier this week, a 14-year-old-boy, Elgarhi Nayem, was killed and several people were injured as they tried to leave the camp fifteen kilometres outside El Aaiun, the capital of the occupied territory. Elgarhi allegedly was gunned down by Moroccan soldiers.



Protesters today report that Elgarhi meanwhile has been buried by Moroccan authorities on a secret

14-year-old Nayem Elgarhi was shot trying to leave the Sahrawi protest camp outside El Aaiun © SPS/afrol News

By staff writers

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