Ebbaba was born in the El Aaiún
Sahrawi refugee camp located in
Tindouf, Algeria. She left the refugee camps at the age of 5 due to her struggle with
celiac disease. She first grew up in
Rome with an Italian foster family, living there for 9 years. She decided to return to the refugee camps so as not to give up her roots, but given the extreme conditions of the refugee camps and the lack of adequate food for her celiac disease, she later moved to Spain where in 2008 she was initially welcomed by a family from
Don Benito (
Extremadura). She enrolled in the Faculty of Information Sciences at the
Complutense University of Madrid, graduating in 2015, later completing a master's degree in journalism at
Radio Televisión Española. She explained that she chose to study journalism because the radio has historically been the main element of connection with the outside world in the Sahrawi refugee camps and that for her it has always been a close means to publicize the situation of the Sahrawi people.
Trajectory She participated in the 26th session of the
United Nations Human Rights Council on 16 June 2024 as a representative of the organization International Youth and Student Movement for the United Nations (ISMUN) demanding the respect to the
right to self-determination, specifically for the
Sahrawi people, and denouncing the
human rights situation in Western Sahara, especially that of
Sahrawi women. While she was a student, she hosted the radio program
Rysala Sahara on the radio station of the Faculty of Information Sciences about the day-to-day of the
Western Sahara conflict. She directed the documentary
Roots and Clamor () in 2014, where she reflects on the difficulties of young Sahrawis studying in Spain, the need to search for roots and the individual and personal conflict they face. In 2016 she was one of the promoters of OpenSpain, a project supported by
Telefónica in which a team made up of young volunteers from Spain, Syria, Iraq, Iran, Venezuela and Western Sahara developed a web page and a mobile application in Spanish, English and Arabic with useful information for war refugees arriving in Spain. She was co-host of the program Daring () on
Radio 3 after specializing in radio and television with a master's degree on RTVE in 2017 with Marta Curiel, participating in the project
A microphone for the Sahara (). In 2018 she participated in the solidarity project promoted by the NGO Leaozinho "The yellow suitcase" to find material and install a radio studio in
Senegal. In May 2019 she was one of the guests of the Spanish section of
Reporters Without Borders on the occasion of the celebration of
World Press Freedom Day. and on the
Televisión Española (TVE) program
Cámara abierta 2.0. She has also collaborated on
Planeta Futuro on
El País and FronteraD. focusing on immigration and women's rights. In March 2021, she coordinated the project "30 women who are changing the world" on RTVE's website. In November 2021 she received the Desalambre Award in the category of Best Written Chronicle or Report for her work ''Fátima's pain, ten years without news of his missing son in the Mediterranean'' (), published on
RTVE.es. The Desalambre awards are granted and organized by
elDiario.es to recognize the work of journalists and social organizers in defense of human rights. In June 2022 she received the Dircom Special Award in recognition of her work as a correspondent in the
Russian invasion of Ukraine. In November 2022 she won the Paco Rabal award for cultural journalism from the AISGE Foundation in the Young Promise category for her report "Saving the Russian cultural legacy in Ukraine: Art must stay out of war." ==References==