Western Sahara
Western Sahara, formerly the Spanish Sahara, Rio de Oro, disputed
area of northwestern Africa; in 1976, the area was annexed
by Morocco and Mauritania after being temporarily surrendered by Spain, but at
the same time the liberation movement Polisario proclaimed the independent
republic of the Saharawi Arab Democratic Republic.

Mauritania withdrew in 1979, and since then all of Western Sahara has been
occupied by Morocco. Guerrilla war and repression have meant that a large part
of the population lives in refugee camps in Algeria, which supports
Polisario. A ceasefire was established at the UN initiative in 1991, and the UN
has since prepared a referendum on the future status of the area.
- State form: occupied territory with exile government
- Area: 266,800 km2
- Population: approximately 548,000 (2014, estimated)
- Capital: El Aaiun
Geography
Western Sahara is predominantly desert. The coast is an 800 km long
coast. Steep rocky coast alternates with beach ramparts, which by the fishing
village of al-Dakhla provide shelter for the only bay on the coast, the Bay of
Rio de Oro. Behind the coast there are long stretches with a kilometer-wide dune
belt, and behind this an 80-150 km wide coastal plain. This one is to the south
covered by sandy desert, erg, with walking dunes of all sizes from
single barkans to parabola dunes (see dune). In the coastal zone are salt pans,
to which wadier periodically conducts water. At the far north, the wide
wadi Saguia el-Hamra pierces the dune, and here the capital El Aaiun lies behind
the dune, 20 km from its port area. Wadier leads to this in a wide branch
network from the entire northern part of the area and from neighboring
countries. During the cool season, the system is usually aquatic all the way to
the coastal delta. Oases are located at springs at the edge of the wadis, and as
the only place in Western Sahara, the vegetation here is bush steppe. Largest
among the oases is the ancient city of al-Semara. East of the coastal plain, a
number of rock plateaus rise and reach towards NØ 600 m The plateaus alternate
between gravel desert (reg) and cliff faces (hamada). SOUTH
of the capital, the hamada consists of phosphate minerals that are the basis for
the area's mining operations. The landscapes are heavily eroded, hard areas
emerge as insel mountains, and a network of wide, deep wadis testifies
to wetter climates in earlier geological periods.

Climate. Western Sahara is located in the arid area of the
Northern Turbine, and the entire area has less than 100 mm of rainfall per
year. Most of it is in the tropical belt, but on the plateaus to the north there
may be night frosts. The coast is characterized by fog due to the cold Canary
flow from the north and the upwelling of cold bottom water; it provides
somewhat lower temperatures than inland.
Population. The current population figures are difficult to
estimate, as any indication of census figures is politically controversial. This
is because precisely the question of who should have the right to vote in
deciding the future of Western Sahara is the main issue in the UN's
efforts. When the Spaniards left the area, the population was estimated at
100,000. According to
AllCityPopulation.com,
the site is a very large part of these Sahrawis have fled to
Algeria, and at the same time there has been a massive and organized
colonization of immigrants from Morocco. It is estimated that today there are
about 417,000 Sahrawis and Moroccans living in Western Sahara (2004) and that
there are about 165,000 Sahrawis in the refugee camps in Algeria. The Sahrawi
population is equally composed of light Arabs or Arabized Berbers and black
descendants of slaves. The Saharawi community is traditionally a nomadic tribal
and family system that includes the black population and where a few families
own most.
- Countryaah:
Do you know how many people there are in Yemen? Check this site to see
population pyramid and resident density about this country.
Industries. Traditionally, half and whole nomadism with goats, sheep
and camels (dromedaries) has dominated. The semi-nomads have horticulture at
sources and in oases where millet, barley, corn, peanuts, dates and citrus
fruits are grown. The total cultivated area during the Spanish period was 50,000
ha, less than 2 ‰ of the area. The coastal waters are rich in fish,
and al-Dakhla is the center of both traditional and modern fishing as well as
the processing industry. In addition, The EU acquired fishing rights in the
territorial waters of Western Sahara. Economically more important, however, is
the mining industry, where the extraction of phosphate since 1967 has been
carried out at Bukra.
Language
The government language is, as in Morocco, modern standard Arabic,
and the spoken language hassaniya as in Mauritania. However, among
Moroccan immigrants, different Moroccan dialects are spoken.
History
The area was little explored when Spain secured control of the coastal
country in 1884 and then established a Spanish protectorate. Only in 1934 did
Spain have control over Western Sahara. Shortly after Morocco's independence in
1956, the country claimed the Spanish colony, and a few years later Mauritania
followed suit. From the early 1970's, several different groups in Western Sahara
began to demand independence and wage armed struggle; Against this background,
Spain began its withdrawal in 1975. In the same year, Morocco began a civilian
occupation (see the Green March), and in 1976, when the Spanish withdrawal was
complete, Mauritania and Morocco split the Western Sahara. This year, the
biggest liberation movement proclaimed, Polisario, an independent republic with
support from, among others, Algeria and started a war against the two occupying
powers. Mauritania withdrew in 1979 from its southern third of Western Sahara,
which Morocco immediately annexed. Despite Polisario's protests, Morocco has
since considered the area an integral part of the Moroccan kingdom. Following an
agreement in 1988 that a referendum held by the UN to decide the future of
Western Sahara, Morocco and Polisario entered into a ceasefire in 1991. However,
the vote has never been held. Negotiations are under way at UN level to resolve
the conflict.
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