Dr Tumasang
Connection is very slow from this end.
Visit Attorney Katlyn Thomas website below for the info.
http://www.katlynthomaslaw.com/
All the best
Aaron
On 3/1/13, Tumasang Martin <tumasangm@hotmail.com> wrote:
> Hi Aaron, can we have the contacts of these lawyers to send some details of
> Southern Cameroons case to them also? Regards Tumasang
> > Date: Fri, 1 Mar 2013 14:15:14 +0100
>> Subject: How Some US Lawyers are trying to Help The Sestern Sahara against
>> Morocco
>> From: nyangkweagien@gmail.com
>> To: ambasbay@googlegroups.com
>>
>> http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/features/86404
>>
>> A lawyer's testimony to the UN
>>
>> Comments of Katlyn Thomas before the Special Political and
>> Decolonization Committee of the United Nations General Assembly,
>> October 2012
>> 2013-02-27, Issue 618
>>
>>
>> cc AY 'After examining every available legal argument to support
>> Morocco's presence in the territory we have come to the conclusion
>> that Morocco cannot claim a legal right to the territory on the basis
>> of any historic relationship it had with the territory prior to its
>> colonization by Spain.'
>>
>> Mr. Chairman, and Ladies and Gentlemen members of the Committee:
>>
>> My name is Katlyn Thomas, and I am the former Chair of the United
>> Nations Committee of The Association of the Bar of the City of New
>> York.
>>
>> The Association is an independent non-governmental organization with
>> more than 23,000 members in over 50 countries. Founded in 1870, the
>> Association has a long history of dedication to the advancement of
>> principles of international law and the adoption of policies to
>> implement the United Nations Charter, notably through its United
>> Nations Committee.
>>
>> For the past two years the United Nations Committee has conducted an
>> intensive investigation of legal issues involved in the dispute over
>> Western Sahara. Last year we published a report on issues involving
>> Morocco's use of the natural resources of the territory pending a
>> determination of sovereignty under law.
>>
>> This past May we published our second report, this one dealing with
>> the fundamental issue of Morocco's right to claim and occupy the
>> territory of Western Sahara, and the right of the indigenous
>> population to self determination under international law.
>>
>> After examining every available legal argument to support Morocco's
>> presence in the territory we have come to the conclusion that Morocco
>> cannot claim a legal right to the territory on the basis of any
>> historic relationship it had with the territory prior to its
>> colonization by Spain. This was clearly established by a decision of
>> the International Court of Justice in 1975 in a case brought at the
>> request of Morocco. Morocco's action within weeks of that decision to
>> avoid the implications of that ruling by sending its army into the
>> territory against the wishes of its inhabitants arguably violates
>> Article 2, Paragraph 4 and Chapter VII, as well as Artlcle 3(a) of
>> General Assembly Resolution 3314 (XXIX) to refrain from acts of
>> aggression. The agreement Morocco reached in 1975 with Spain under
>> which Spain agreed to withdraw from the territory and permit Morocco
>> and Mauritania to occupy it does not justify any legal claim to the
>> territory. Despite its more than 30 years of occupation of Western
>> Sahara, neither the United Nations, nor the African Union, nor any
>> individual state has recognized Morocco's claims to the territory as
>> legitimate. Even the members of the Security Council who have
>> advocated direct talks between Morocco and the Polisario that have
>> taken place since 2007, as opposed to the implementation of the
>> Settlement Plan that would require a referendum, have maintained their
>> support for the right to self-determination of the people of Western
>> Sahara.
>>
>> On the other hand, the right under well established international
>> legal principles of the indigenous population of the territory – the
>> Sahraouis – to exercise self determination in determining the
>> political future of Western Sahara cannot be seriously disputed, and
>> has not been diminished under law despite this long period of foreign
>> occupation. Morocco has attempted to qualify this right by comparing
>> it to the right of self determination of a population which inhabits a
>> part of an established state. Under this argument the right to self
>> determination of the Sahraouis should be considered subordinate to the
>> right of Morocco to maintain its "territorial integrity." The fallacy
>> of this argument is easily apparent – Western Sahara is not now and
>> has never been recognized under international legal principles to be a
>> territory belonging to Morocco.
>>
>> Our Committee concluded that the right to self-determination under
>> international law requires that the Sahraouis have the opportunity to
>> freely determine their political status and that this determination
>> must include the option of independence. Accordingly, the exercise of
>> self-determination, in whatever form it may take, must include the
>> possibility that the final status of Western Sahara will be
>> independence. Turning to the question of how this right can be
>> exercised, the Committee noted that the following three procedures
>> would, in principle, be among the options consistent with the
>> Sahraouis' right to self-determination under international law:
>>
>> First, enforcement of the original U.N.-OAU 1991 Settlement Plan.
>> Under this alternative, the referendum would be conducted by MINURSO
>> in accordance with the provisions of the Settlement Plan agreed to by
>> the parties to the conflict, and the list of eligible voters
>> established by MINURSO, under the supervision of the Security Council
>> and the African Union, and consistent with internationally recognized
>> legal norms. We believe that the United Nations would be within its
>> rights to demand that Morocco adhere to its agreement in 1991 to
>> permit this referendum to take place, if not under its powers under
>> Chapter 6 of the United Nations charter, then at least under its
>> powers under Chapter 7 of the Charter.
>>
>> Second, enforcement of a version of the Peace Plan advanced by former
>> United States Secretary of State James Baker III when he was the
>> Personal Envoy of the United Nations Secretary General to Western
>> Sahara, or an alternative plan, which provides for an act of
>> self-determination with an option for independence, and which ensures
>> that the electorate will be those entitled to the right to
>> self-determination under international law. Under this alternative, a
>> referendum would ultimately be held which includes – among other
>> options – a ballot option for independence.
>>
>> Third, UN-ordered negotiations on a "political solution" with
>> preconditions, which include (1) the requirement that all options for
>> self-determination be included, including independence, and (2) a
>> timetable for such negotiations, after which, if no agreement is
>> reached, a referendum will be held with all options available. We note
>> that the Comprehensive Peace Agreement for Sudan included such a
>> provision, so there is some recent precedent for such a procedure.
>>
>> Each of these three options may require a mandatory order by the
>> Security Council under Chapter 7 of the United Nations Charter.
>> Whether to invoke the powers of Chapter 7 to resolve this dispute is a
>> political issue and we are mindful of the political problems such a
>> decision may entail. However, this would be a means – perhaps the only
>> means – of enforcing the self-determination principles that apply to
>> this dispute under international law. Thus far, in the face of the
>> parties' entrenched and irreconcilable positions on sovereignty over
>> the territory, there has been inconsistency between the principle of
>> self-determination under international law, which has been repeatedly
>> confirmed through General Assembly Resolutions on the matter to
>> include an independence option, and the actions of the Security
>> Council, in merely asking the parties to proceed with discussions on a
>> political solution with no preconditions.
>>
>> The international community needs to take steps to see that this
>> dispute is resolved in the near future. The longer it takes to resolve
>> the sovereignty issue, the more complicated will be the task of
>> implementing any solution reached. On behalf of the United Nations
>> Committee of The Association of the Bar of the City of New York, I
>> call upon this Committee to adopt a position with regard to the
>> settlement of the dispute over Western Sahara that is consistent with
>> principles of international law.
>>
>> EDITOR'S NOTE
>> The New York City Bar report on the Western Sahara is available here.
>>
>> * BROUGHT TO YOU BY PAMBAZUKA NEWS
>>
>> * Please do not take Pambazuka for granted!
>> --
>> Aaron Agien Nyangkwe
>> Journalist-OutCome Mapper
>> P.O.Box 5213
>> Douala-Cameroon
>> Telephone +237 73 42 71 27
>>
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--
Aaron Agien Nyangkwe
Journalist-OutCome Mapper
P.O.Box 5213
Douala-Cameroon
Telephone +237 73 42 71 27
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