“The streets of Laayoune are currently swarming with an alphabet soup of [Moroccan] security forces,” said Shelley. “Each week I and many other journalists receive photographs of Sahrawis covered in blood, bandages, bruises after their release from custody. I know children as young as five years old who have been chased through their neighborhood by police on the grounds they were illegally demonstrating.”
Shelley also described the brutal beating and murder of Lembarki Hamdi, a young Sahrawi killed by 11 Moroccan security agents who ran him down with a vehicle and then trampled him.
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Additionally, in a related but sepa- rate event, Congressional staff and others were invited to a screening on Capitol Hill of the powerful documentary: Western Sahara: Africa’s Last Colony and hear from JoMarie Fecci, one of the film’s producers. Shown on Capitol Hill under the sponsorship of the Subcommittee on Africa, Human Rights and International Operations of the U.S. House International Relations Committee, the event was organized by Lindsey Plumley, who participated in DFF’s fact-finding mission to the Sahrawi refugee camps in May/June of 2005. |