Saharawi fishermen continue to protest exclusion from Boujdour harbour
For the third consecutive day, Saharawi fishermen have been protesting in the harbour of Boujdour, demanding the right to fish in their own waters. Since Monday, Moroccan police officers have been preventing the Saharawi from accessing their boats.
In protest of their exclusion from Boujdour’s harbour, more than 70 Saharawi fishermen gathered at the harbour’s entry point at 16h this afternoon, 12 January. This immediately triggered a fierce response from Moroccan police, reportedly once again backed by Moroccan settlers. The protesters claim they were immediately dispersed by force, and some, like Elkharrachi Ebbaha, were threatened they’d be arrested.
Western Sahara Resource Watch has received photos of the events.
Moroccan police claim that the Saharawi fishermen lack the necessary licenses to fish. But the Saharawi fishermen riposte that only Moroccan settlers receive these licenses granted by the Moroccan authorities.
“We have to pay 1.500 Dirham (150€) in order to obtain such a license”, a Saharawi fisherman stated, “we simply cannot afford that”.
Saharawi fishermen estimate the number of Moroccan settlers that have received fishing licenses for Boujdour harbour to be around 1.000 individuals, while no more than 10 Saharawi would enjoy the same privilege.
The fishermen complain that the Moroccan authorities have been preventing them quite frequently from fishing, especially in this period when it is officially allowed to fish for shellfish, octopus and squid. Morocco declared the fishing period for these species opened on 5 January.
“Shellfish are immediately transported to Moroccan cities such as Agadir and Casablanca. We don’t gain anything from it, we don’t even get to eat shellfish”, adds another fisherman. “But the Moroccan authorities have no right to stop us from going into our waters and fish to make a living”.
The EU considers to pay Morocco to fish in occupied Western Sahara. An EU-Morocco Fisheries Agreement from 2013 would be both politically controversial and in violation of international law.
The international Fish Elsewhere! campaign demands the EU to avoid such unethical operations, and go fishing somewhere else. No fishing in Western Sahara should take place until the conflict is solved.