El Aaiún

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El Aaiún
Military checkpoint on the suburbs of El Aaiún
Military checkpoint on the suburbs of El Aaiún
El Aaiún (Western Sahara  )
El Aaiún
El Aaiún
Location in Western Sahara, Morocco
Coordinates: 27°9′13″N 13°12′12″W / 27.15361, -13.20333
Country Morocco
Claimed by Western Sahara and Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic
Region Laâyoune-Boujdour-Sakia El Hamra
Population (2006)
 - Total 188,084

El-Aaiún (also transliterated "Laâyoune or "El Ayun")(Arabic: العيون, transliterated al-`ayūn), is a city in the Western Sahara and a former Spanish colony. Occupied by Morocco since 1976[1], El-Aaiún is the capital of the Moroccan region of Laâyoune-Boujdour-Sakia El Hamra. It is also claimed by the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic as their de jure capital. The city is located at 27°9′13″N, 13°12′12″W (27.153611, -13.203333). [1]

Contents

[edit] Demographics

The city has a population of 188,084[2] and is the largest city in Western Sahara. It is a growing economical pole in what Morocco sees as its Southern Provinces. Its population is a mixture of Moroccans from the North as well as Sahrawis from Southern Saharan Morocco and natives of Western Sahara.

NASA photo of El Aaiún.
NASA photo of El Aaiún.

[edit] Etymology

"El Aaiún" is the transliteration of the Arabic name used as the Spanish name for the city. "Laâyoune" is a French transliteration used in Moroccan literature. The Arabic name means "the springs".

In the area south of Tindouf, Algeria, there is a Sahrawi refugee camp named El-Aaiun, after this city.

[edit] Status

The United Nations mission for the referendum, MINURSO, which administers the ceasefire settlement of 1991 between Morocco and the Polisario Front, has its headquarters in the city.

Beginning in the spring of 2005, the Independence Intifada began demanding the release of political prisoners and demonstrations in favor of independence took part in some parts of the city, and a trend towards opening up the closed territory seems to have been broken off, with several expulsions of foreign journalists and human rights delegations, accused by the Moroccan authorities of serving as a pretext for the pro-independence activists to step up riots.

[edit] References

  1. ^ UN General Assembly Resolution 34/37 and UN General Assembly Resolution 35/19
  2. ^ Stefan Helders (2006). Western Sahara - largest cities (per geographical entity) (English). World Gazetteer. Retrieved on 2006-08-24.

[edit] External links

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