A month-long blockade of Morocco’s lifeline road link to West Africa is stopping 150 trucks a day.
It’s being maintained by Saharawi men and woman demanding that the kingdom, which has illegally occupied their country for 45 years, keep its promise to have a referendum on self-determination for the territory.
France’s Europe and Foreign Affairs Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian visited Morocco this week.
His statement interestingly did not condemn the blockade or call for its immediate lifting.
This comes of little comfort to the 200 Moroccan truck drivers stranded in Guerguerat, the town on the border of Mauritania and the Sarahawi Democratic Republic, because of the blockade.
Le Drian reiterated France’s desire for a just, lasting and mutually agreed settlement in the Western Sahara.
Moroccan troops marched into the country when Spanish forces left its after the fall of General Franco.
A 15- year war ensued that was ended by United Nations peacekeepers.
Morocco constructed a sand wall to keep Saharawi fighters at bay.
The blockade is maintained because Morocco does not dare to try exercising any control of what happens behind that wall, known as a berm.