- gigg00 a écrit:
- a juba
[qugigoooo t'es frustre aussi la RASD a une presentation en syrie.c'est honteux d'avoir une relation diplomatique avec un pays qui reconnait la RASD comme l'algerie.ote]
moi je te donne du "frere", toi tu me donne du "frustre"?moi j'ai essaye de te montrer qu'il ya pas 42 o 60 o 1000 il ya seulement 32 miserables iles perdu dans des oceans e aucun pays arabe a part l'algerie portant la meme source du wikepedia, ben se je t'es vexe je m'excuse, mais je te conseille de lire la charte du forum avant q'on se tronsforme en DRARI HNA.
qu'on a la syrie que je repete j'aime pas bcp, apportez moi vos sources e preuves ( moi aussi j'aimerai bien voir clair) pour l'entrainement des polizbel?.
quant a la reconaissance diplomatique de la rasd pour vos infos meme l'italie dernierement a voter une mention de reconaissance diplomatique de la rasd qu' a on risque la rompture diplomatique e tajjedine badou ( notre ambassadeur) a falli prendre les valises e rentrer a rabat, nonche le gouvernemnt l'a rassure qu' apres cette montien des fichus de la gauche ici ne suivra jamais une consquence reel e pratique sur le terrain elle restera seulement une mention.
bref pour la syrie j'attend tes preuves senon c moi qui va voir des frustre.[/quote]
Il n'y a pas d'etre comme cela nous sommes tous pour le sahara marocains.soyons calme et ne montrons pa a nos ennemis que nous les marocains on est des sauvages comme eux. on est un peuple civilise, si deux marocains ne sont pas d'accord cela ne signifie pas que l'un des deux n'est pas marocains .differentes idees signifient un peuple unis pour le bien de sa nation.
Western Sahara
Index Chronology
26 Apr 1860 Morocco cedes Río de Oro (Western Sahara) and Ifni
to Spain by Treaty of Tetuán; no settlement.
Feb 1884 Trading post, Villa Cisneros, established by
the Compañía Comercial Hispano-Africana.
3 Nov 1884 Spain occupies Río de Oro (Spanish West Africa).
26 Dec 1884 Spanish protectorate declared over Río de Oro to
the Cape Blanc peninsula and Angra de Cinta.
10 Jul 1885 Spanish protectorate declared over the coast from
Boujdour to Cape Blanc.
6 Apr 1887 Río de Oro Dependent Protectorate.
6 Apr 1887 - 1 Dec 1903 Subordinated to the Canary Islands.
3 Oct 1904 Saguia el Hamra and zone of Tarfaya to the Draa
Wadi annexed.
27 Nov 1912 Cabo Juby (Tarfaya) part of Spanish Morocco
protectorate.
26 Jul 1946 - 10 Apr 1958 Spanish West Africa (África Occidental Española)
(Río de Oro, Cabo Juby, and Saguia el Hamra
and from 1952 Ifni).
23 Nov 1957 - 25 Feb 1958 Moroccan irregular occupation of parts of Spanish
Sahara (Edchera to 13 Jan 1958; Tan-Tan to Feb
1958; Tafurdat and Smara to 10 Feb 1958; Bir
Nazaran and Ausert to 21 Feb 1958).
12 Jan 1958 Overseas province of Spain (Spanish Sahara).
2 Apr 1958 Tarfaya restored to Morocco by Treaty of Angra
Cinta.
4 Jul 1974 Autonomy granted, but not implemented.
14 Nov 1975 Spain relinquishes sovereignty.
14 Feb 1976 Spain announces it has transferred sovereignty
to Morocco.
26 Feb 1976 Spain terminates its administration.
27 Feb 1976 Saharawi Arab Democratic Republic¹ (SADR)
proclaimed by the Polisario Front.
14 Apr 1976 Spanish Sahara is partitioned by Morocco
and Mauritania (Tiris al-Gharbiyya). Morocco
later divides its area into its southern
provinces: Boujdour, (from 1983) Dakhla (Oued
Eddahab),Es Smara, Laayoune, and (from 1990)
Wadi al-Dhahab (Rio de Oro).
11 Aug 1979 Mauritanian part of the territory annexed by
Morocco.
9 Sep 1991 - United Nations monitored cease-fire implemented.
SADR Map
Historical Maps of
Western Sahara
Map of Expansion
of Moroccan
Control
(1982-1989)
Royal Commissioner
10 Jul 1885 - 6 Apr 1887 Emilio Bonelli Hernando (b. 1855 - d. 1926)
Subgovernors
(subordinated to governors of Canary Islands)
6 Apr 1887 - c.1902 Emilio Bonelli Hernando (s.a.)
1902 - 7 Nov 1901 Ángel Villalobos
Governors (from 1946, also governors-general of Spanish West Africa)
(1934 - 1956 subordinated to Spanish High Commissioners in Morocco)
7 Nov 1901 - 1 Dec 1903 Ángel Villalobos
1 Dec 1903 - 7 Nov 1925 Francisco Bens Argandoña (b. 1867 - d. 1949)
7 Nov 1925 - 19 Jun 1932 Guillermo de la Peña Cusi
19 Jun 1932 - 30 Aug 1933 Eduardo Canizares Navarro
30 Aug 1933 - 1 Jul 1934 José González Deleito
1 Jul 1934 - 4 May 1936 Benigno Martínez Portillo
4 May 1936 - 7 Aug 1936 Carlos Pedemonte Sabin
7 Aug 1936 - 12 Mar 1937 Rafael Gallego Sainz
12 Mar 1937 - 31 May 1940 Antonio de Oro Pulido
31 May 1940 - 17 Aug 1949 José Bermejo López
17 Aug 1949 - 29 Mar 1952 Francisco Rosaleny Burguet
29 Mar 1952 - 26 Feb 1954 Venancio Tutor Gil
26 Feb 1954 - 23 May 1957 Ramón Pardo de Santallana Suárez
23 May 1957 - 10 Jan 1958 Mariano Gómez Zamalloa y Guirce
Governors-general (until 10 Apr 1958 also governors-general of Spanish West Africa)
10 Jan 1958 - 22 Jul 1958 José Héctor Vázquez
27 Jul 1958 - 6 Oct 1961 Mariano Alonso Alonso (b. 1899 - d. 19..)
13 Oct 1961 - 21 Feb 1964 Pedro Latorre Alcubierre (b. 1900)
6 Mar 1964 - 5 Nov 1965 Joaquín Agulla Jiménez Coronado
5 Nov 1965 - 26 Nov 1965 Adolfo Artalejo Campos
5 Dec 1965 - 2 Feb 1967 Ángel Enríquez Larrondo
18 Feb 1967 - 4 Mar 1971 José María Pérez de Lema Tejero
4 Mar 1971 - 6 Jun 1974 Fernando de Santiago y Díaz de (b. 1910 - d. 1994)
Mendívil
6 Jun 1974 - 6 Feb 1976 Federico Gómez de Salazar y Nieto (b. 1912 - d. 2006)
Transitional Administration
6 Feb 1976 - 27 Feb 1976 Representatives
+ Rafael de Valdés Iglesias (Spain)
+ Ahmed Bensouda (Morocco)
+ Abdellahi Ould Cheikh (Mauritania)
Chairmen of the Revolutionary Council
27 Feb 1976 - 9 Jun 1976 El Wali Mustafa Sayed (b. 1947? - d. 1976) POLISARIO
10 Jun 1976 - 30 Aug 1976 Mahfoud Ali Beiba (acting) (b. 1953?) POLISARIO
Chairman of the Revolutionary Command Council
30 Aug 1976 - 16 Oct 1982 Mohamed Abdelaziz (b. 1947) POLISARIO
President (chief of state)
16 Oct 1982 - Mohamed Abdelaziz (s.a.) POLISARIO
Prime ministers
5 Mar 1976 - 4 Nov 1982 Mohamed Lamine Ould Ahmed (b. 194.) POLISARIO
(1st time)
4 Nov 1982 - 18 Dec 1985 Mahfoud Ali Beiba (1st time) (s.a.) POLISARIO
18 Dec 1985 - 16 Aug 1988 Mohamed Lamine Ould Ahmed (s.a.) POLISARIO
(2nd time)
16 Aug 1988 - 18 Sep 1993 Mahfoud Ali Beiba (2nd time) (s.a.) POLISARIO
19 Sep 1993 - 8 Sep 1995 Bouchraya Hammoudi Beyoun POLISARIO
(1st time)
8 Sep 1995 - 10 Feb 1999 Mahfoud Ali Beiba (3rd time) (s.a.) POLISARIO
10 Feb 1999 - 29 Oct 2003 Bouchraya Hammoudi Beyoun POLISARIO
(2nd time)
29 Oct 2003 - Abdelkader Taleb Oumar POLISARIO
¹Morocco retains de facto control, however the SADR is currently recognized by 45 countries and the African Union ([until 2002 Organization of African Unity] 1982): Algeria (1976), Angola (1976), Antigua and Barbuda (1987), Barbados (1988), Belize (1986), Bolivia (1982), Cuba (1980), East Timor (2002), Ecuador (1983-2004, 2006), Ethiopia (1979), Grenada (1979), Guinea-Bissau (1976-97, 2000), Guyana (1979), Haiti (2006), Iran (1980), Jamaica (1979), Laos (1979), Lesotho (1979), Malawi (1994-2001, 2008), Mali (1984), Mauritania (1984), Mauritius (1982), Mexico (1979), Mozambique (1976), Namibia (1990), Nicaragua (1979-2000, 2007), Nigeria (1984), North Korea (1976), Panama (1978), Papua New Guinea (1981), Rwanda (1976), Sierra Leone (1980-2002, 2003), St. Kitts and Nevis (1987), St. Vincent and the Grenadines (2002), South Africa (2004), Suriname (1982), Syria (1980), Tanzania (1978), Trinidad and Tobago (1986), Uganda (1979), Uruguay (2005), Venezuela (1982), Vietnam (1979), Zambia (1979), Zimbabwe (1980);
--- former diplomatic recognitions: Afghanistan (1979-2002), Albania (1987-2004), Benin (1976-97), Botswana (1980-2005), Burkina Faso (1984-96), Burundi (1976-2006), Cambodia (1979-2006), Cape Verde (1979-2007), Chad (1980-97, 2006), Colombia (1985-2000), Congo (Brazzaville)(1978-96), Costa Rica (1980-2000), Dominica (1979-200.), Dominican Republic (1986-2002), El Salvador (1989-97), Equatorial Guinea (1978-80), Ghana (1979-2001), Guatemala (1986-98), Honduras (1989-2000), India (1985-2000), Kenya (2005-2006), Kiribati (1981-2000), Liberia (1985-97), Libya (1980-1999), Madagascar (1976-2005), Nauru (1981-2000), Paraguay (2000), Peru (1984-96), São Tomé and Príncipe (1978-96), Seychelles (1977-2008), St. Lucia (1979-89), Solomon Islands (1981-89), South Yemen (1977-90) Swaziland (1980-97), Togo (1976-97), Tuvalu (1981-2000), Uruguay (2005), Vanuatu (1980-2000), Yugoslavia [from 2003 Serbia and Montenegro](1984-2004).
Territorial Disputes: Morocco claims and administers Western Sahara, whose sovereignty remains unresolved; UN-administered cease-fire has remained in effect since Sep 1991, administered by the UN Mission for the Referendum in Western Sahara (MINURSO), but attempts to hold a referendum have failed and parties thus far have rejected all brokered proposals.
Party abbreviation: POLISARIO = Frente Popular de Liberación de Seguía el-Hamra y Río de Oro (Popular Front for the Liberation of Seguia el Hamra and Rio de Oro (authoritarian, Sahrawi nationalist, separatist -only legal party [socialist 1976-1991])