PUSL.- According to various sources on the ground, the city of El Aaiun is experiencing a moment of great increase in pressure from the Moroccan occupier against the Saharawi population.
The streets are full of police, military and paramilitary forces, the houses of human rights activists surrounded, Saharawi journalists and bloggers under threat and persecution.
“We live in a concentration camp,” says Mohamed, a young Saharawi from the unemployed movement.
“” Now they are more, tomorrow they can be less and then more again. But make no mistake every day of our lives, we are under surveillance, threat, victims of abuse, torture, forced impoverishment. “Testifies Selma.
“This has no end! Nobody wants to know! Can you imagine what it is like to live like this? Seeing your torturers every day on the street? Having your house surrounded for days? Taking your children to school in fear of what is going to happen to them? We are not safe any second, day or night. They invade our houses, beat us, break everything. I am fed up! Morocco has to leave, this is not their land and we did not invite them “Hayat, mother of three girls and a boy.