Governor of Spanish Sahara | |
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Gobernador del Sahara Español | |
Reports to | Head of State of Spain |
Seat | Villa Cisneros (1884–1940) El Aaiún (1940–1976) |
Formation | 3 November 1884 |
First holder | Emilio Bonelli |
Final holder | Federico Gómez de Salazar y Nieto |
Abolished | 6 February 1976 |
History of Western Sahara |
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Western Saharaportal |
The colonial governors of Spanish Sahara were the colonial administrators responsible for the territory of Spanish Sahara, an area equivalent to modern-day Western Sahara. The list covers the period from November 1884 to February 1976, when Spain announced it had transferred sovereignty to Morocco and terminated its administration of the territory. [1]
(Dates in italics indicate de facto continuation of office)
Tenure | Portrait | Incumbent | Notes |
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Spanish suzerainty | |||
3 November 1884 to 10 July 1885 | Emilio Bonelli , Commandant | ||
Royal Commissioner on the West Coast of Africa | |||
10 July 1885 to 6 April 1887 | Emilio Bonelli , Royal Commissioner | Arrives in Río de Oro on 26 August 1885 | |
Political and Military Subgovernors of Río de Oro (subordinated to the captains-general of the Canary Islands ) | |||
6 April 1887 to bf. 1902 | Emilio Bonelli , Subgovernor | ||
1902 to 1 December 1903 | Ángel Villalobos , Subgovernor | ||
1 December 1903 to 1913 | Francisco Bens Argandoña , Subgovernor | ||
Delegates of the High Commissioner in the Southern Zone of the Spanish protectorate in Morocco (subordinated to Spanish high commissioners in Morocco ) | |||
1913 to 7 November 1925 | Francisco Bens Argandoña , Delegate | Occupation of Cape Juby and La Güera | |
7 November 1925 to 19 June 1932 | Guillermo de la Peña Cusi , Delegate | ||
19 June 1932 to 30 August 1933 | Eduardo Cañizares Navarro , Delegate | ||
30 August 1933 to 1 July 1934 | José González Deleito , Delegate | ||
1 July 1934 to 29 August 1934 | Benigno Martínez Portillo , Delegate | ||
Government delegates in the Sahara (subordinated to Spanish high commissioners in Morocco) | |||
29 August 1934 to 4 May 1936 | Benigno Martínez Portillo , Government Delegate | ||
4 May 1936 to 7 August 1936 | Carlos Pedemonte Sabín , Government Delegate | Spanish coup of July 1936; start of the Spanish Civil War | |
7 August 1936 to 12 March 1937 | Rafael Gallego Sainz , Government Delegate | ||
12 March 1937 to 17 May 1940 | Antonio de Oro Pulido , Government Delegate | Founded the city of El Aaiún in 1938 [2] | |
Politico-Military Governor of Ifni and the Sahara and Delegate of the High Commissioner in the Southern Zone of the Spanish protectorate in Morocco (subordinated to Spanish high commissioners in Morocco) | |||
17 May 1940 to 24 July 1946 | José Bermejo López , Governor | ||
Governors of the Government of Spanish West Africa | |||
24 July 1946 to 17 August 1949 | José Bermejo López , Governor | ||
17 August 1949 to 29 March 1952 | Francisco Rosaleny Burguet , Governor | ||
29 March 1952 to 26 February 1954 | Venancio Tutor Gil , Governor | ||
26 February 1954 to 23 May 1957 | Ramón Pardo de Santayana y Suárez , Governor | Apostolic Prefecture of Spanish Sahara and Ifni established on 5 July 1954, with Félix Erviti Barcelona OMI as the first apostolic prefect | |
23 May 1957 to 10 January 1958 | Mariano Gómez-Zamalloa y Quirce , Governor | Served at the start of the Ifni War | |
Governors-general of Spanish Sahara | |||
10 January 1958 to 22 July 1958 | José Héctor Vázquez , Governor-General | Served at the end of the Ifni War | |
27 July 1958 to 6 October 1961 | Mariano Alonso Alonso , Governor-General | ||
13 October 1961 to 21 February 1964 | Pedro Latorre Alcubierre , Governor-General | ||
6 March 1964 to 5 November 1965 | Joaquín Agulla y Jiménez-Coronado , Governor-General | ||
5 November 1965 to 26 November 1965 | Adolfo Artalejo Campos , Governor-General | ||
5 December 1965 to 2 February 1967 | Ángel Enríquez Larrondo , Governor-General | ||
18 February 1967 to 4 March 1971 | José María Pérez de Lema Tejero , Governor-General | Served at the time of the Zemla Intifada | |
4 March 1971 to 6 June 1974 | Fernando de Santiago y Díaz de Mendívil , Governor-General | ||
6 June 1974 to 6 February 1976 | Federico Gómez de Salazar y Nieto , Governor-General | Served at the time of the Green March | |
14 February 1976 | Spain announces it has transferred sovereignty to Morocco | ||
26 February 1976 | Spain terminates its administration [1] | ||
27 February 1976 | Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic proclaimed by the Polisario Front [3] | ||
14 April 1976 | Spanish Sahara is partitioned and annexed by Morocco (claiming Southern Provinces) and Mauritania (claiming Tiris al-Gharbiyya) | ||
11 August 1979 | Mauritanian part of the territory annexed by Morocco |
Western Sahara is a disputed territory in North-western Africa. It has a surface area of 272,000 square kilometres (105,000 sq mi). Approximately 30% of the territory is controlled by the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR); the remaining 70% is occupied and administered by neighboring Morocco. It is the most sparsely populated country in Africa and the second most sparsely populated country in the world, mainly consisting of desert flatlands. The population is estimated at 618,600. Nearly 40% of that population lives in Morocco-controlled Laayoune, the largest city of Western Sahara.
Transport in Western Sahara is very limited by sea, road and air with camels being the primary means of transportation in the desert area. Road transport by buses remain the major mode of transportation. The longest conveyor belt in the world is 100 kilometres (62 mi) long, from the phosphate mines of Bu Craa to the coast south of Laayoune. The belt moves about 2,000 metric tons of rock containing phosphate every hour from the mines to El-Aaiun, where it is loaded and shipped.
Western Sahara, formerly the Spanish colony of Spanish Sahara, is a disputed territory claimed by both the Kingdom of Morocco and the Popular Front for the Liberation of the Saguia el Hamra and Rio de Oro, which is an independence movement based in Tifariti and Bir Lehlou. The Annexation of Western Sahara by Morocco took place in two stages, in 1976 and 1979, and is considered illegal under international law.
The Polisario Front, Frente Polisario, Frelisario or simply Polisario, is a Sahrawi nationalist liberation movement seeking to establish a Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic for the Sahrawi people through the means of self-determination and armed resistance in the disputed territory of Western Sahara.
The Moroccan Western Sahara Wall or the Berm, also called the Moroccan sand wall, is an approximately 2,700 km-long (1,700 mi) berm running south to north through Western Sahara and the southwestern portion of Morocco. It separates the Moroccan-controlled areas on the west from the Polisario-controlled areas on the east. The main function of the barriers is to exclude guerrilla fighters of the Polisario Front, who have sought Western Saharan independence since before Spain ended its colonial occupation in 1975, from the Moroccan-controlled western part of the territory.
The Sahrawis, or Sahrawi people, are an ethnic group native to the western part of the Sahara desert, which includes the Western Sahara, southern Morocco, much of Mauritania, and along the southwestern border of Algeria. They are of mixed Hassani Arab and Sanhaji Berber descent, as well as West African and other indigenous populations.
Spanish Sahara, officially the Spanish Possessions in the Sahara from 1884 to 1958, then Province of the Sahara between 1958 and 1976, was the name used for the modern territory of Western Sahara when it was occupied and ruled by Spain between 1884 and 1976. It had been one of the most recent acquisitions as well as one of the last remaining holdings of the Spanish Empire, which had once extended from the Americas to the Spanish East Indies.
The Madrid Accords, formally the Declaration of Principles on Western Sahara, was a treaty between Spain, Morocco, and Mauritania setting out six principles which would end the Spanish presence in the territory of Spanish Sahara and arrange a temporary administration in the area pending a referendum.
The Southern Provinces or Moroccan Sahara are the terms used by the Moroccan government to refer to the occupied territory of Western Sahara. These designations encompass the entirety of Western Sahara, which spans three of Morocco's 12 top-level administrative regions. The term "Southern Provinces" is frequently used on Moroccan state television.
Tifariti is an oasis town and the temporary capital of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic, located in north-eastern Western Sahara, east of the Moroccan Berm, 138 km (86 mi) from Smara and 15 km (9 mi) north of the border with Mauritania. It is part of what Polisario Front calls the Liberated Territories and Morocco call the Buffer Zone. It has been the de facto temporary capital of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic since the government moved there in 2008 from Bir Lehlou. It is the headquarters of the 2nd military region of the SADR.
The flag of Western Sahara, also known as the flag of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic, uses a national flag consisting of a black, white and green horizontal tricolor charged with a red star and crescent in the center stripe and a red chevron at the hoist. It is used on SADR-controlled areas, while the Moroccan flag is used on the occupied parts of Western Sahara.
The Western Sahara conflict is an ongoing conflict between the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic/Polisario Front and the Kingdom of Morocco. The conflict originated from an insurgency by the Polisario Front against Spanish colonial forces from 1973 to 1975 and the subsequent Western Sahara War against Morocco between 1975 and 1991. Today the conflict is dominated by unarmed civil campaigns of the Polisario Front and their self-proclaimed SADR state to gain fully recognized independence for Western Sahara.
The coat of arms of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic is a symbol created by the Polisario Front, the national liberation movement of Western Sahara. The Polisario Front proclaimed the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic on February 27, 1976, and both the flag and the coat of arms were adopted as state symbols.
The Western Sahara War was an armed struggle between the Sahrawi indigenous Polisario Front and Morocco from 1975 to 1991, being the most significant phase of the Western Sahara conflict. The conflict erupted after the withdrawal of Spain from the Spanish Sahara in accordance with the Madrid Accords, by which it transferred administrative control of the territory to Morocco and Mauritania, but not sovereignty. In late 1975, the Moroccan government organized the Green March of some 350,000 Moroccan citizens, escorted by around 20,000 troops, who entered Western Sahara, trying to establish a Moroccan presence. While at first met with just minor resistance by the Polisario Front, Morocco later engaged a long period of guerrilla warfare with the Sahrawi nationalists. During the late 1970s, the Polisario Front, desiring to establish an independent state in the territory, attempted to fight both Mauritania and Morocco. In 1979, Mauritania withdrew from the conflict after signing a peace treaty with the Polisario Front. The war continued in low intensity throughout the 1980s, though Morocco made several attempts to take the upper hand in 1989–1991. A cease-fire agreement was finally reached between the Polisario Front and Morocco in September 1991. Some sources put the final death toll between 10,000 and 20,000 people.
Sahrawi nationality law is the law of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic's (SADR) governing nationality and citizenship. The SADR is a partially recognized state which claims sovereignty over the entire territory of Western Sahara, but only administers part of it. The SADR also administers Sahrawi refugee camps.
The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic:
The First Battle of Amgala was fought between 27 and 29 January 1976 around the oasis of Amgala, Western Sahara, about 260 kilometres (160 mi) west of the border with Algeria. Units from the Algerian Army were attacked by units from the Royal Moroccan Armed Forces on the night of 27 January. The Algerians withdrew after fighting for 36 hours. However, the retaliation came fairly soon, between 13 and 15 February 1976 Polisario units defeated Moroccan troops in the second Battle of Amgala.
The Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic, also known as the Sahrawi Republic and Western Sahara, is a partially recognized state, located in the western Maghreb, which claims the non-self-governing territory of Western Sahara, but controls only the easternmost one-fifth of that territory. It is recognized by 46 UN member states and South Ossetia. Between 1884 and 1975, Western Sahara was known as Spanish Sahara, a Spanish colony. The SADR is one of the two African states in which Spanish is a significant language, the other being Equatorial Guinea.
Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic–Spain relations are the current and historical relations between the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic and Spain.
Clashes between military forces belonging to the Kingdom of Morocco and the self-proclaimed Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR), represented at the United Nations by the Polisario Front, broke out in the disputed region of Western Sahara in November 2020. It was the latest escalation of an unresolved conflict over the region, which is largely occupied by Morocco, but 20–25% is administered by the SADR. The violence ended a ceasefire between the opposing sides that had held for 29 years in anticipation of a referendum of self-determination that would have settled the dispute. Despite the establishment of the United Nations Mission for the Referendum in Western Sahara in 1991, the referendum was never held.