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Western Sahara denounces France’s plan to finance projects in the disputed region

Algerian state media, citing Western Sahara Information Ministry's statement, reported Sunday that France's plan to use its French Development Agency to fund projects in disputed Sahrawi areas is "provocative".

Morocco claims Western Sahara as its own, but an Algerian-backed independance movement wants a sovereign nation.

The statement from the ministry said that "this is a dangerous increase in France's hostility towards the Sahrawi population." It added that France's plan was "an explicit support of Morocco's illegal occupation" of parts of Western Sahara.

Franck Riester visited Morocco as France's Minister of Foreign Trade.

Riester, who visited Morocco during his visit, posted on X that "the renewal of French-Moroccan relationships will involve new links between our private sector."

In an article published in France's Le Monde, Riester stated that AFD could, through its private sector funding arm Proparco fund a project to build a high voltage power line connecting Dakhla, the capital of Western Sahara, with the Moroccan port city Casablanca.

The Western Sahara Information Ministry issued a statement that said: "The Sahrawi Government once again calls upon all countries and sectors of the public and private sector to refrain from any activities of any kind on the Sahrawi National Territory."

In 1975, Morocco seized the majority of Western Sahara from colonial Spain. This sparked a guerrilla conflict with the Sahrawi Polisario Front which claims the desert territory of northwest Africa as its own.

Since 1991, the United Nations has mediated a ceasefire and sent a team to assist in the organisation of a referendum about the future status of the territory. However, the two sides are still at loggerheads. (Reporting by Ahmed Tolba, Lamine Chiikhi and Adam Makary. Editing by Christina Fincher.

(source: Reuters)