Beginnings In 1971 a group of young Sahrawi students in the universities of Morocco began organizing what came to be known as
The Embryonic Movement for the Liberation of Saguia el-Hamra and Rio de Oro. After attempting in vain to gain backing from several Arab governments, including both Algeria and Morocco, but only drawing faint notices of support from Libya and Mauritania, the movement eventually relocated to Spanish-controlled
Spanish Sahara to start an armed rebellion. The Polisario Front was formally constituted on 10 May 1973 at
Ain Bentili by several Sahrawi university students, survivors of the 1968 massacres in
Zouérat and Sahrawi veterans of the
Spanish Army. They called themselves the Constituent Congress of the Polisario Front. On 1 May 1977, the Polisario Front raided the city of Zouerate,
Mauritania, kidnapping six French iron mining technicians and killing two civilians. The Polisario abducted two more civilians in October. They were freed in December. Its first
secretary general was
Brahim Ghali. With Algeria's help, Polisario set up headquarters in
Tindouf.
Withdrawal of Spain After Moroccan pressures through the
Green March of 6 November and the
Royal Moroccan Army's previous invasion of eastern
Saguia el-Hamra of 31 October, Spain entered negotiations that led to the signing of the
Madrid Accords whereby Spain ceded Spanish Sahara to Morocco and Mauritania; in 1976 Morocco took over Saguia El Hamra and Mauritania took control of
Río de Oro. The Polisario Front proclaimed the
Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR) on 27 February 1976, and waged a guerrilla war against both Morocco and Mauritania. The
International Court of Justice at
The Hague had
issued its verdict on the former Spanish colony just weeks before, which each party interpreted as confirming its right to the disputed territory. The Polisario kept up the guerrilla war while they simultaneously had to help guard the columns of Sahrawi refugees fleeing, but after the air bombings by the
Royal Moroccan Air Force on improvised Sahrawi refugee camps in
Umm Dreiga,
Tifariti,
Guelta Zemmur and
Amgala, the Front had to relocate the refugees to
Tindouf (western region of Algeria). For the next two years the movement grew tremendously as Sahrawi refugees continued flocking to the camps and Algeria and Libya supplied arms and funding. Within months, its army had expanded to several thousand armed fighters,
camels were replaced by modern
jeeps (most of them were Spanish
Land Rover Santana jeeps, captured from Moroccan soldiers), and 19th-century
muskets were replaced by
assault rifles. The reorganized army was able to inflict severe damage through
guerrilla-style
hit-and-run attacks against opposing forces in Western Sahara and in Morocco and Mauritania proper.
Withdrawal of Mauritania A comprehensive peace treaty was signed on 5 August 1979, in which the new Mauritanian government recognized Sahrawi rights to Western Sahara and relinquished its own claims. Mauritania withdrew all its forces, and later formally recognized the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic, causing a massive rupture in relations with Morocco. The area of Western Sahara evacuated by Mauritania (
Tiris al-Gharbiya, roughly corresponding to the southern half of Río de Oro), was annexed by Morocco in August 1979.
Moroccan wall stalemates the war From the mid-1980s Morocco largely managed to keep Polisario troops off by building a huge
berm or sand wall (the
Moroccan Wall), staffed by an army, enclosing within it the
economically useful parts of Western Sahara (
Bou Craa,
El-Aaiun,
Smara, etc.) This stalemated the war, with no side able to achieve decisive gains, but artillery strikes and sniping attacks by the Polisario continued, and Morocco was economically and politically strained by the war. Today Polisario controls
the part of the Western Sahara on the east of the Moroccan Wall.
Ceasefire and the referendum process A
ceasefire between the Polisario Front and Morocco, monitored by
MINURSO (UN), has been in effect since 6 September 1991, on the promise of a
referendum on independence the following year. However, the referendum stalled over disagreements on voter rights. Numerous attempts to restart the process (most significantly the launching of the 2003
Baker Plan) seem to have failed. In April 2007, the government of Morocco suggested that a self-governing entity, through the
Royal Advisory Council for Saharan Affairs (CORCAS), should govern the territory with some degree of autonomy for Western Sahara. The project was presented to the
United Nations Security Council in mid-April 2007, and quickly gained French and US support. Polisario had handed in its own proposal the day before, which insisted on the previously agreed referendum, but allowed for negotiating the status of Moroccans now living in the territory should the outcome of a referendum be in favor of independence. This led to the negotiations process known as the
Manhasset negotiations. Four rounds were held in 2007 and 2008; no progress was made, however, as both parties refused to compromise about what they considered core
sovereignty issues. Polisario agreed to add autonomy as per the Moroccan proposal to a referendum ballot, but refused to relinquish the concept of an independence referendum itself, as agreed in 1991 and 1997. Morocco, in its turn, insisted on only negotiating the terms of autonomy offered, but refused to consider an option of independence on the ballot. The 30-year cease-fire between Morocco and Polisario Front was broken in November 2020 as the government tried to open a road in the
Guerguerat buffer zone near the border with Mauritania. Sahrawi self-determination activist
Sultana Khaya, who has been accused by Moroccan authorities of being a "supporter of violence" with the Polisario, has been under de facto house arrest since November 2020, subject to repeated home raids and sexual assault by Moroccan security forces, as reported by a number of international human rights organizations. ==Political ideology==