Muhammad Sidi Brahim Sidi Embarek Basir (Arabic: محمد سيدي إبراهيم سيدي مبارك بصير; born 1942 or 1944 – disappeared June 18, 1970) was a Sahrawi nationalist leader, disappeared and presumedly executed by the Spanish Legion in June 1970.[4][5]

Mohammed Bassiri
محمد بصيري
Born
Muhammad Sidi Brahim Sidi Embarek Basir[1]

1942 or 1944
DisappearedJune 18, 1970
El Aaiun, Spanish Sahara
StatusPresumed dead
Alma materCairo University, Damascus University
Occupation(s)Journalist, Quranic teacher
Known forSahrawi activism
MovementMovement for the Liberation of Saguia el Hamra and Wadi el Dhahab

Biography

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Muhammad Bassiri was born in a Sahrawi family in Tan-Tan,[4][5][1][6] which was ceded to Morocco after the Treaty of Angra de Cintra in 1958,[7] (nowadays Southern Morocco, then part of the Cap Juby in Spanish protectorate in Morocco)[3] The Tarfaya strip, which included Bassiri's hometown, had been attributed to Morocco in a clause imposed by France in the Franco-Spanish Treaty of 1912, despite the fact that Morocco had never had either sovereignty, territorial right or actual control over it, as ruled by the International Court of Justice in 1975. Its cession to Morocco in 1958, which caused a clash between Sahrawi guerrillas and Moroccan troops in Tan-Tan, is interpreted by Sahrawi nationalists as an amputation of their historical territory.[8]

In 1957 he left Tan-Tan for the newly independent Morocco to attend school in Marrakesh. He proceeded to Cairo, Egypt where he studied the Quran and the Arabic language. In Damascus, Syria, he studied journalism and became familiarized with Pan-Arabism. On returning to Morocco in 1966, he founded Al-Shihab (The Torch), a Sahrawi nationalist newspaper.[1] He also worked as a journalist in Casablanca.

The Sahara has never been Moroccan. The Moroccan kingdom will never be able to justify that the Sahara was part of the Alauit kingdom. Through history, Morocco never sent any Moroccan governor to the Western Sahara, nor have the Saharawis ever pledged loyalty to any Moroccan monarch; there were only commercial relations between Saharawis and Moroccans.

— Muhammad Bassiri, [9]

In March 1968 he was allowed to enter Spanish Sahara (he had tried to enter in December 1967, but he was detained and expelled), because of the closing of the newspaper by Moroccan authorities in late 1967, and settled in the city of Smara as a Quranic teacher.[10] It was there he started to organize the anti-colonial movement known as the movement of liberation (In Arabic: Harakat Tahrir) calling for end of Spanish occupation of the Sahara. Bassiri stressed non-violence (influenced by the peaceful struggle of Gandhi in the colonized India) and wanted to bring about change through democratic action, although the ruthless colonial rule imposed by Francisco Franco's Spain forced the Harakat Tahrir to remain clandestine. Bassiri didn't want a precipitated independence,[citation needed] but to negotiate with the Spanish authorities.[citation needed]

Disappearance

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On early June 17, 1970 the organization appeared openly in a peaceful demonstration against the Spanish colonial rule, asking for autonomy (as a first step to independence) and self-determination in the Zemla neighborhood of El-Aaiun, in parallel to an official Francoist demonstration. The Spanish governor-general of the colony, General José María Pérez de Lema y Tejero, went to Zemla to discuss with the organizers of the demonstration, but did not reach an agreement to make them leave the place and join the official demonstration. Tensions escalated between the growing mass of Sahrawi protesters and the Spanish reservist soldiers, who were stoned-throwed after detaining three speakers of the protest, answered opening fire on the mass at 17:30 PM. Disturbance continued until 19:00 PM, when troops of the Tercio "Juan de Austria" of the Spanish Legion brutally put down what remained of the protesters. The events were seen by the Spanish authorities as a defiance to the official demonstration organized by the General governor, made to show the world the supposed Sahrawi support to the Spanish regime and refusal to the UN involvement. These events have been dubbed the Zemla Intifada by Sahrawis.

Bassiri, who had abandoned Zemla before violence erupted, was informed of the events. He was offered to escape to Mauritania by car, but he refused it. According to Salem Lebser, he replied: "Nobody could say I'm an adventurer who has led people to death and then disappeared..I already fled once Morocco, where I felt like a stranger. But I would not flee from my own land".[11] Bassiri was tracked down that night, detained around 03:00 AM of June 18, and jailed at El Aaiun Territorial Police headquarters. On June 19, and after being allegedly tortured, he testified before the Spanish military authorities.[12] A photograph of him registering before the "Habs Shargui" prison authorities is the last known trace of him.[citation needed] Later, he was allegedly moved to "Sidi Buya", the Spanish Legion headquarters in El Aaiun. According to testimonies given by three different persons to then apostolic prefect to Spanish Sahara Félix Erviti Barcelona, Bassiri was executed by a Spanish Legion patrol in the dunes surrounding El Aaiun on the night of 29 July 1970,[13] although Spanish authorities of the time claimed that he had been expelled from the territory to Morocco on that date, moreover they also claimed later that Bassiri had entered Spanish Sahara illegally from Algeria in September 1970.[14] Spanish colonial authorities even claimed in 1971 that Bassiri had died on the Skhirat coup d'état against Hassan II.[14]

Present-day Sahrawi nationalists such as the Polisario Front honor him as the father of the modern Sahrawi independence struggle, as well as the first of the Sahrawi "disappeared" and a national martyr for the Liberty.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c H. Micheal Tarver, Emily Slape (2016). The Spanish Empire: A Historical Encyclopedia [2 volumes] A Historical Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. p. 36. ISBN 978-1-61069-422-3.
  2. ^ Hodges, Tony (1983). Western Sahara: The Roots of a Desert War. L. Hill. ISBN 978-0-88208-151-9.
  3. ^ a b "Tan-Tan | History, Population, & Facts | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2022-01-22.
  4. ^ a b Toby Shelley (4 July 2013). Endgame in the Western Sahara: What Future for Africa's Last Colony. Zed Books Ltd. pp. 139–140. ISBN 978-1-84813-658-8.
  5. ^ a b Pablo San Martín (15 October 2010). Western Sahara: The Refugee Nation. University of Wales Press. p. 74. ISBN 978-0-7083-2381-6.
  6. ^ Biografía de Mohamed Basiri Desaparecidos.org (in Spanish)
  7. ^ Joanna Allan (2019). Silenced Resistance Women, Dictatorships, and Genderwashing in Western Sahara and Equatorial Guinea. University of Wisconsin Pres. p. 51. ISBN 978-0-299-31840-6.
  8. ^ Pablo San Martin (2010). Western Sahara The Refugee Nation. University of Wales Press. pp. 69–71. ISBN 978-1-78316-118-8.
  9. ^ Pablo San Martin (2010). Western Sahara The Refugee Nation. University of Wales Press. p. 189. ISBN 978-1-78316-118-8.
  10. ^ Bárbulo, Tomás (2002). La historia prohibida del Sáhara Español. Barcelona: Ediciones Destino / Colección Imago Mundi vol. 21. p. 71. ISBN 978-84-233-3446-9.
  11. ^ Bárbulo, Tomás (2002). La historia prohibida del Sáhara Español. Barcelona: Ediciones Destino / Colección Imago Mundi vol. 21. pp. 87–88. ISBN 978-84-233-3446-9.
  12. ^ Declaración de Mohamed Basiri ante la Policía Territorial, 19 de Junio de 1970 Desaparecidos.org (in Spanish)
  13. ^ Bárbulo, Tomás (2002). La historia prohibida del Sáhara Español. Barcelona: Ediciones Destino / Colección Imago Mundi vol. 21. pp. 66–68. ISBN 978-84-233-3446-9.
  14. ^ a b Bárbulo, Tomás (2002). La historia prohibida del Sáhara Español. Barcelona: Ediciones Destino / Colección Imago Mundi vol. 21. p. 89. ISBN 978-84-233-3446-9.