Khalihenna Ould Errachid

Khalihenna Ould-Errachid (Arabic: خلي هنا ولد الرشيد; Khalihuna Walad Al-Rashid) is a Sahrawi Moroccan politician. He is the president of the Royal Advisory Council for Saharan Affairs (CORCAS), a Moroccan government body supporting Morocco's claim on Western Sahara.

Khalihenna Ould-Errachid
خلي هنا ولد الرشيد
Ould-Errachid in 2015
President of the Royal Advisory Council for Saharan Affairs
Assumed office
25 March 2006
MonarchMohammed VI
Mayor of Laayoune
In office
6 June 1983  20 June 2009
MonarchsHassan II
Mohammed VI
Member of Parliament
for Laayoune
In office
5 June 1977  30 September 2002
Minister in charge of the development of Southern Provinces
In office
11 April 1985  30 September 1986
MonarchHassan II
Prime MinisterMohammed Karim Lamrani
Minister in charge of Saharan Affairs
In office
10 March 1977 – 5 October 1981
5 November 1981 – 5 October 1983
30 November 1983 – 11 April 1985
30 September 1986 – 11 August 1992
MonarchHassan II
President of the Sahrawi National Union Party
In office
10 April 1974  22 May 1975
Personal details
Born (1951-11-24) 24 November 1951[1]
Laayoune, Seguia el-Hamra, Spanish West Africa
Political partyNational Rally of Independents

Biography

Early life

Khalihenna Ould-Errachid was born in 1951 in a tent near Laayoune to an influential family in the Reguibat tribe.[1] In the 1960s, he attended reunions with Muhammad Bassiri and was part of the Zemla Intifada.[1]

Political career

In 1974, Ould-Errachid started the pro-Spanish Sahrawi National Union Party (PUNS).[2] The PUNS, which had been created with the approval of the Spanish authorities, was the only authorized political party in Spanish Sahara (also in the rest of Spain, except the ruling Falange movement) between 1974 and 1975, had been created to counter the territorial claims from neighbours Morocco and Mauritania, as well as the Sahrawi nationalism Polisario Front, created in 1973.[1]

In April 1975, during a press conference in Paris, Ould-Errachid declared that "if it weren't for phosphates, nobody would vindicate the territory. What Morocco seeks is not the Sahrawi welfare, but the exploitation of phosphates. We want independence, and the circumstance is given that in the future state of Western Sahara there are phosphates deposits."[3]

Under Hassan II

During the United Nations visiting mission to Spanish Sahara in May–June 1975, and before the Madrid Agreement, Ould-Errachid fled from El Aaiún to Las Palmas, and then took another plane to Morocco. Few days after, on May 19, Ould-Errachid declared his allegiance to the King of Morocco, Hassan II in Fez.[4][5] Ould-Errachid claims that he helped organize the Green March in 1975.[4] Several sources alleged that he left Western Sahara with between 160,000 and 6,000,000 pesetas taken from a bank account linked to PUNS.[6][7] Under King Hassan II, he was appointed in 1977 as Minister of Saharan Affairs, and later as mayor (President of the Municipal Council) of Laayoune from 1983 until 2006, when he was succeeded by his brother, Moulay Hamdi Ould Errachid.

He was viewed as very close to the King Hassan's right-hand man, the minister of interior Driss Basri, who held responsibility for the Saharan territories, where Polisario waged a guerrilla war against Morocco until the 1991 cease-fire (still in effect, pending final resolution of the conflict).[8] Following the death of King Hassan in 1999, and the dismissal of Basri by the new king Mohammed VI's new government a few years later, Ould-Errachid believed his political career was over.[9]

Under Mohammed VI

In 2006, King Mohammed VI created the Royal Advisory Council for Saharan Affairs (CORCAS) to promote Morocco's autonomy plan. As head of the royal council, Khalihenna Ould-Errachid made a public comeback, and was featured prominently in Moroccan diplomacy.

Khalihenna Ould-Errachid considers the Polisario Front as an obstacle to a peaceful solution due to what he saw as deep dependency on Algeria.[10] The Polisario refuses to acknowledge CORCAS and refuses Morocco's autonomy plan, opting for full independence instead.[11]

In 2008, a transcript from a 2005 Equity and Reconciliation Commission meeting regarding the Western Sahara War was leaked to Al-Jarida al-Oula, during the meeting, Ould-Errachid declared that "there are some people [...], about three or four Army officers who have committed what can be called war crimes against prisoners outside the scope of the war" and that "many civilians were thrown from helicopters or buried alive".[12]

See also

Further reading

  • Hodges, Tony (1983), Western Sahara: The Roots of a Desert War, Lawrence Hill Books (ISBN 0-88208-152-7)
  • Pazzanita, Anthony G. and Hodges, Tony (1994), Historical Dictionary of Western Sahara, Scarecrow Press (ISBN 0-8108-2661-5)

References

  1. SOUDAN, François (2006-10-02). "Le " monsieur Sahara " de M6". JeuneAfrique.
  2. Bárbulo, Tomás (2002). La historia prohibida del Sáhara Español. Barcelona: Ediciones Destino / Colección Imago Mundi vol. 21. p. 175. ISBN 978-84-233-3446-9.
  3. "Si no hubiera fosfatos, nadie habría reinvindicado el Sáhara" (in Spanish). ABC Sevilla. 1975-04-23. Retrieved 2010-09-22.
  4. "President". CORCAS.
  5. "Hassan II recibe al líder fugitivo del PUNS" (in Spanish). EFE. 1975-05-19. Archived from the original on 2011-07-08. Retrieved 2010-10-08.
  6. David M. Alvarado Roales (7 December 2012). "Los cismas tras la autonomía saharaui" (in Spanish). Igadi.org (Avui). Retrieved 25 September 2013.
  7. "Sahara: el PUNS se desmorona" (in Spanish). March.es (Informaciones). 20 May 1975. Retrieved 25 September 2013.
  8. BROUSKY, Omar. "Que peut faire le Corcas ?". lejournal-hebdo.com. Le Journal Hebdo. Archived from the original on 4 September 2006.
  9. "" Le courage " de la vingt-cinquième heure". Le Journal Hebdo. Archived from the original on 28 September 2007.
  10. "Conférence de presse du Président du Corcas pendant la 2ième session ordinaire du Conseil à Smara". CORCAS.
  11. "SAHARA OCCIDENTAL - ACTUALITES". ARSO.
  12. LMRABET, ALI (2006-06-17). "Un responsable marroquí reconoce crímenes de guerra en el Sáhara". El Mundo.
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