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Thursday, April 25, 2024
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Saadani Maouelainine, Corcas member: "No one uses dictatorship to protect revolution, if not that revolution is used to establish dictatorship"

Spanish analyst Clara Riveros, Latin American business specialist, compared the tragedy of Saadani Maouelainin, member of the Royal Advisory Council for Saharan Affairs (Corcas), in Tindouf camps, to events reported by Georges Orwell In his famous novel, "1984", which tells the story of the single party that ruled in the name of "Big Brother", and which strengthened its power, by means of terror, hatred, sequestration, torture, assassination and falsification of history in the name of patriotism and revolution.


A tragedy that the family of Saadani Maouelainin lived with her, when her father was accused of high treason, before losing her daughter, deported to Cuba.


The correspondent of the Spanish newspaper "Mondiarillo", devoted an article published on March 21, under the title: "Women outside geographical space: freedom, memory and militancy", to Saadani Maouelainin.


She exclaims in this article: "how not to think about Orwell and his famous novel 1984, when Saadani Maouelainin tells her tragic story ?!".

Saadani described Tindouf camps in southern Algeria as "a world where progress is only made towards suffering", a place subject to constant and close monitoring to the point of even controlling the inhabitants' breathing and "life there is repression".


Saadani understood that the revolution advocated by the military separatist movement is a falsified revolution, as her late father understood it.


This is what makes her say: "No one uses the dictatorship to protect the revolution, if not that revolution is used to establish the dictatorship."


She decided, in 2003, to return to her home country, which her father left on his way to Algeria, deceived by the Polisario thesis, at the time of the Sahara conflict.


She then helped to expose the truth to the world by saying that the leaders of the Polisario were to be tried, and that the detainees in the Tindouf camps should be freed.


This article by Clara Riveros was published as part of a series devoted to International Women's Day, telling the stories and experiences of women from all regions of the world who have had exceptional backgrounds.


The Spanish writer has devoted some of her articles to Saharawi women held in the Tindouf camps, indicating that there are more than 100 kidnapped women, such as Maalouma, Daria Mbarek and others, who were sequestered due to tribal traditions in total violation of their individual rights.


-News on Western Sahara issue/ Corcas-

 

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