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Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic

This article is part of the series:
Politics and government of
the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic



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The Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR) is a government in exile, meaning it does not effectively control its claimed territory, the former Spanish colony of Western Sahara. The Polisario front, the military wing that controls the SADR, currently claims to administer the area that it calls the Free Zone, the eastern strip of Western Sahara. It conducts diplomatic relations with a number of other states from its headquarters at refugee camps at Tindouf in Algeria.

Contents

[edit] Recognition

The SADR is recognized by 49 states. Several states that do not recognize the Sahrawi Republic, however, recognize the Polisario movement as a legitimate representative of the population of the Western Sahara, but not its government-in-exile as a state.

On the other hand, Moroccan sovereignty over the territory is explicitly supported by the Arab League[1],[2]and by 25 states. For a list of these governments, see Foreign relations of Morocco.

Besides Mexico and South Africa, India was the only major power to have ever recognized SADR when it allowed the Sahrawi Republic to open a consulate in New Delhi in 1985. However, India withdrew its recognition in 2000.

As with any fluid political situation, diplomatic recognitions of either party's rights are subject to frequent and sometimes unannounced change.

[edit] States recognizing the SADR

The following is a list of governments of the world that have formally recognized Western Sahara as a sovereign nation, with the exiled Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic as its legitimate government.

After recognizing an independent Western Sahara, some states have since retracted their recognitions. Others have chosen a milder option, to "freeze" recognition pending the outcome of the referendum on self-determination or for other reasons.

This list is based on several sources, and it may be incomplete. Currently, it contains 83 countries, and of these

Diplomatic relations of the SADR
  • 49 recognize the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic.
  • 13 of these 49 are home to Sahrawi embassies.
  • 13 have "frozen" relations.
  • 22 have cancelled relations.
  • 1 have ceased to exist.

Note: The tables can be sorted alphabetically or chronologically using the Sort none.gif icon.

Countries which recognize the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic
State Date of recognition Notes
Burundi March 1, 1976 Froze recognition May 5, 2006 33 and reinstated them 2008-06-17 [1]
Algeria March 6, 1976 Embassy.
Angola March 11, 1976 Embassy.
Mozambique March 13, 1976 Embassy.
Guinea-Bissau March 15, 1976 Canceled April 2, 1997; re-opened embassy September 26, 2000.
North Korea March 16, 1976
Rwanda April 1, 1976
Panama June 23, 1978 Embassy.
Tanzania November 9, 1978 Embassy established June 2005. [3]
Ethiopia February 24, 1979 Embassy. [4]
Vietnam March 2, 1979
Cambodia April 10, 1979
Laos May 9, 1979
Grenada August 20, 1979
Guyana September 1, 1979
Jamaica September 4, 1979
Uganda September 6, 1979
Nicaragua September 6, 1979 Frozen July 21, 2000; re-established January 12, 2007[2]
Mexico September 8, 1979 [5] Embassy. [6]
Lesotho October 9, 1979 [7][8]
Zambia October 12, 1979
Cuba January 20, 1980 Embassy. [9]
Iran February 27, 1980 [10][11]
Syria April 15, 1980
Libya April 15, 1980[12][13]
Botswana May 14, 1980
Zimbabwe July 3, 1980[14]
Mali July 4, 1980
Vanuatu November 27, 1980 Canceled November 2000, restored in 2008[3]
Papua New Guinea August 12, 1981
Mauritius July 1, 1982
Venezuela August 3, 1982 Embassy.
Suriname August 11, 1982
Bolivia December 14, 1982
Ecuador November 14, 1983 Canceled June 19, 2004; reestablished February 8, 2006. [15] [16]
Mauritania February 27, 1984 [17]
Nigeria November 12, 1984 Embassy. [18] [19] [20]
Trinidad and Tobago November 1, 1986
Belize November 18, 1986 [21]
St. Kitts and Nevis February 25, 1987
Antigua and Barbuda February 27, 1987
Barbados February 27, 1988
Namibia May 31, 1990[4]
St Vincent and the Grenadines February 14, 2002 [22]
East Timor May 20, 2002 [23] First country to establish relations with East Timor.
South Africa September 15, 2004 Embassy. [24] [25]
Kenya June 25, 2005 [26] Embassy. [27]
Uruguay December 28, 2005 [28] [29]
Haiti November 22, 2006 Embassy.
Countries which in the past recognized the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic
State Date of recognition Notes
Madagascar February 28, 1976 Froze recognition June 4, 2005
Benin March 11, 1976 Canceled March 21, 1997
Togo March 17, 1976 Canceled June 1997
South Yemen (PDRY and PRSY) February 2, 1977 It is unknown whether diplomatic recognition was ever extended by the government of the unified Republic of Yemen.
Seychelles October 25, 1977 The Seychelles withdrew official recognition of the SADR on March 17, 2008, according to a Seychellois official.[5]
Republic of Congo June 3, 1978 Canceled September 13, 1996
São Tomé and Príncipe June 22, 1978 Canceled October 23, 1996
Equatorial Guinea November 3, 1978 Canceled May 1980
Afghanistan May 23, 1979 Canceled July 12, 2002
Cape Verde July 4, 1979 Withdrew recognition on 27 July 2007 [30]
Ghana August 24, 1979 Frozen May 2001
Dominica September 1, 1979 Frozen.
St. Lucia September 1, 1979 Canceled March 1989
Sierra Leone March 27, 1980 Frozen c. 2002-2003
Swaziland April 28, 1980 Canceled June 1997
Chad July 4, 1980 Canceled May 9, 1997 (Apparently re-started and then canceled again March 18, 2006 [31]).
Costa Rica October 30, 1980 Frozen April 2000
Tuvalu August 12, 1981 Canceled September 15, 2000
Kiribati August 12, 1981 Canceled September 15, 2000
Nauru August 12, 1981 Canceled September 15, 2000
Solomon Islands August 12, 1981 Canceled January 1989
Burkina Faso March 4, 1984 Canceled June 5, 1996
Peru August 16, 1984 Suspended relations, October 1996
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia November 28, 1984 [32] The country ceased to exist in 1992. Canceled by Serbia and Montenegro, October 28, 2004, but due to legal international order Serbia and Montenegro did not have capacity to make that decision.[6]
Colombia February 27, 1985 Frozen December 2000.
Liberia July 31, 1985 Canceled September 1997
India October 1, 1985 [33] Canceled June 26, 2000
Guatemala April 10, 1986 Frozen April 1998. In 2002, denied ever recognizing SADR [34].
Dominican Republic June 24, 1986 Frozen on May 23, 2002
Albania December 29, 1987 [35] Canceled November 9, 2004
El Salvador July 31, 1989 Canceled April 1997
Honduras November 8, 1989 Frozen January 2000
Malawi November 16, 1994 Canceled June 2001; later reinstated and canceled again September 18, 2008[7]
Paraguay February 9, 2000 Frozen 25 June 2000

[edit] References

General
Specific
  1. ^ Burundi recognizes the SADR
  2. ^ http://www.spsrasd.info/en/infos/2007/01/sps-e120107.html
  3. ^ "Vanuatu and the Saharawi Republic establish diplomatic relations at Ambassadorial level". UPES. 2008-08-09. http://www.upes.org/body1_eng.asp?field=sosio_eng&id=1095. Retrieved 2008-08-09. 
  4. ^ Kalley, Jacqueline Audrey. Southern African Political History: a chronological of key political events from Independence to Mid-1997, 1999. Page 304.
  5. ^ "Seychelles withdraws recognition for SADR". Panapress (Afrik.com). 2008-03-18. http://en.afrik.com/news11537.html. Retrieved 2008-04-10. 
  6. ^ Arbitration Commission of the Peace Conference on the former Yugoslavia Opinion No. 10 (Federal Republic of Yugoslavia - Serbia and Montenegro) In this decision, the Commission ruled that the FRY (Serbia and Montenegro) could not legally be considered a continuation of the former SFRY, but was rather a new state. Thus the European Community (and the UN) should not automatically recognize the FRY, but apply to it the same criteria to applied to the recognition of the other post-SFRY states.
  7. ^ Malawi withdraws recognition of Western Sahara govt: report

[edit] See also




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