Campaign for the liberation of the
Gdeim Izik Group and all the Saharawi political prisoners
The Kingdom of Morocco has decided to prosecute 24
Sahrawis of the Gdeim Izik Group by a civil court, next 26 December 2016, in
Rabat, the capital of the kingdom. They had been condemned by a military court
to barely up to life, on February 18, 2012. This is another illegal decision
because it is not responding to the law, for breaching the Geneva Conventions
ratified by the Moroccan State[1], or to the
injustice suffered for more than 5 ½ years in violation of International Human
Rights Law, which, like the previous military trial, will be plagued by
irregularities and lack of the most elementary procedural guarantees.
Facing this new simulacrum, the Association of Relatives
of Saharawi Prisoners and Disappeared (AFAPREDESA) launches an urgent appeal
for the release of the 21 Saharawis still in arbitrary detention since their kidnapping
in connection with the violent dismantling, on November 8, 2010, the camp of
Gdeim Izik, where more than 20,000 Saharawis had been grouped 12 kilometers
from El Aaiún to claim social and civil rights.
AFAPREDESA demands immediate and
unconditional release of this group as all Saharawi political prisoners in
Moroccan prisons.
AFAPREDESA requests the massive
presence of international observers in this illegal Moroccan trial against
human rights activists and defenders.
AFAPREDESA calls for the intervention
of the UN, the AU, the EU, political parties, human rights organizations and
civil society for the release of all Saharawi political prisoners as well as
support and solidarity actions with thim.
Enough of repression and human rights
violations in the occupied territories of Western Sahara!
AFAPREDESA will inform national and international opinion
about the trajectory of these human rights activists and defenders recognized
for their defense of human rights and freedom in Western Sahara:
Abdelah Abhah
Abdelah Abhah was born in 1980 in Aaiun. Worker. He is a
well-known activist for the rights of the Saharawi workers and for the
self-determination of the Saharawi people. He had participated in numerous
demonstrations and sittings demanding the release of Saharawi political
prisoners, clarification of the whereabouts of the Saharawi disappeared, the
end of the occupation and the extension of the mandate of the United Nations
Mission for the Referendum in Western Sahara (MINURSO) to human rights. He
joined the demonstration of Gdeim Izik to claim that the Saharawi people can
benefit from the natural resources that Morocco expelled with the complicity of
international actors, including Spain, France and the European Union itself. He
was kidnapped on November 19, 2010 in Aaiún. He was subjected to torture and
ill-treatment. Sentenced to life imprisonment by a military tribunal in Rabat
on 18 February 2012. Because torture, deprived conditions of detention, lack of
medical care and numerous strikes carried out to date, he suffer from acute
pain at the level of the back and joints and spinal column, he suffer also rheumatism
and kidney diseases. It is currently in the Aarajat jail, 6 km from Salé
(Morocco).
Family appeal for release all saharawi prisoners:
Mother of Abdelah Abhah and his niece
"TO SEE THEM FREE FINALLY WITH THEIR FAMILIES"
Translation to inglesh of the Testimony of Jadu niece Adellah Abhah:
"... -from 0mn17s- I am niece of Abdelah Abhah.
He is my uncle, one of the group of Gdeim Izik in the Moroccan prisons. I have
been since 2005, more or less, without seeing him. I have come here to see,
more or less, how these people are suffring under Moroccan occupation. It's worse than I
thought. It is even worse than what we see on television and what we hear.
Despite the suffering of prisoners in prisons, there is also the suffering of
families. For example, my grandmother has never been to visit her son. He is already 3 years in jail. She is very
sick, she would like to see him as any mother but there are many circumstances,
many problems, let him does not visiting
his son. I also would like to visit my uncle and can not, she can hardly walk
and because to many other problems that prevent us from going to see him. But,
thank very much to all the associations that are with us, that support us, near
or far, to all those people who are with us. I hope that they will continue
fighting with us to see my uncle and together with all those Saharawi
prisoners in the Moroccan prisons, to see them finally free with their
families. Thank you…"
[1] Article
76 - Treatment of detainees
Protected
persons charged shall be detained in the occupied country and, if convicted,
shall be punished there. They shall be separated, if possible, from the other
detainees and subjected to a sufficient dietary and hygienic regime to maintain
them in good health and corresponding at least to the regime of the
penitentiary establishments of the occupied country. IV GENEVA CONVENTION
https://www.icrc.org/eng/resources/documents/treaty/treaty-gc-4-5tdkyk.htm
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