Speech by Mr Llewellyn Landers, Deputy  Minister of International Relations and Cooperation of the Republic of South  Africa at the Side-Event on the Applicability of International Humanitarian Law  in Western Sahara, on the margins of the High-Level Segment of the UNHRC  Meetings, Geneva Switzerland, 28 February 2018 
        Programme  Director 
          Excellencies 
          Distinguished  guests 
          Ladies and  gentlemen 
        We are here  today to discuss the applicability of international humanitarian law in Western  Sahara. This is particularly appropriate given the tragic passing exactly one  week ago today of Mohamed Al-Ayoubi, a Sahrawi human rights activist, from  injuries sustained under torture in custody. I request that we all stand now  for a minute’s silence for Mohamed Al-Ayoubi and all Sahrawi victims of  torture. 
        Thank you. 
        Programme  Director 
        In our  understanding, International Humanitarian Law has two streams, namely the Law  of The Hague and the Law of Geneva. The former pertains to the duties and  conduct of belligerents during war. The latter pertains to the treatment of  civilians during armed conflict. It is this that concerns us today. 
        We need to  recall some basic rules of International Humanitarian Law. It states, for  example, that persons not taking part in hostilities shall be protected in all  circumstances; that the wounded and the sick shall be cared for and protected  by the party which has them in its power; and that no one shall be subjected to  torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. 
        One of the  principles of International Humanitarian Law is that civilians be treated  humanely at all times and are entitled to respect for their physical and mental  integrity, their honour, family rights, religious convictions and practices,  and their manners and customs. This principle has been affirmed by the  International Committee of the Red Cross as a norm of customary international  law. 
        Notwithstanding  these rules and principles, we are continually confronted with reports  cataloguing the repression of protest action in the occupied territory; the  prosecution of activists calling for Sahrawi self-determination or reporting  human rights violations; the use of excessive force against Sahrawi protesters;  restrictions of the right to peaceful assembly; the holding of protesters in  so-called “preventive detention” for long periods; and torture of those in  detention. 
        Mohamed  Al-Ayoubi, to whom I referred earlier, was tortured in prison. He was  originally detained on 8 November 2010 when the Gdeim Izik protest camp was  dismantled by the military of the occupying power. He was tortured through  beatings, sleep-deprivation and cigarette burns on his body. He was sexually  abused, choked and held in solitary confinement. He was hospitalised in a  critical condition for three months. In 2013 he was sentenced to 20 years in  prison based on confessions extracted under torture in a trial that was  described as unfair by various NGO’s and international observers. Conditions  related to his torture included diabetes, kidney failure, hepatitis and a  permanently dislocated shoulder. This situation directly contradicts  International Human Rights Law and International Humanitarian Law. 
        In addition  to this case and the many like it, other serious violations of International  Humanitarian Law include population transfers into the occupied territory; the  plundering of the natural resources of Western Sahara; and the dispersion of  Sahrawi prisoners in detention centres hundreds of kilometres from their  families.  
        I am pleased  to inform you that this past Friday, 23 February 2018, the High Court of South  Africa, Eastern Cape Division, ruled finally that the cargo of phosphate on  board the vessel NM Cherry Blossom that was impounded in Port Elizabeth last  year is the property solely of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic. 
        Programme  Director 
        South Africa  remains unwavering in its support for the holding of a referendum on  self-determination for the Sahrawi people. We shall continue to offer concrete  support and solidarity for the programmes of the Polisario Front. We will  continue to share our experiences in the peaceful settlement of conflict  because any further delay in finding a lasting solution has consequences for  peace and security in Africa. 
        We believe  that the readmission of the Kingdom of Morocco to the African Union presents us  with an opportunity to resolve the suffering of the Sahrawi people. We  therefore echo the decision of the Assembly of the African Union taken during  its 30th Ordinary Session held in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, from 28 to 29 January  2018, calling on the two member states “to engage, without preconditions, in  direct and serious talks facilitated by the AU and UN for the holding of a free  and fair referendum for the people of Western Sahara”, and calling on the two  parties “to fully cooperate with the AU High Representative for Western Sahara,  former President Joaquim Chissano of Mozambique, and the Personal Envoy of the  UN Secretary-General, Mr. Horst Köhler”. 
        In  conclusion, Programme Director 
        This year we  celebrate the birth centenary of Nelson Mandela, a freedom fighter who was the  embodiment of human rights. In his statement from the dock at the opening of  the defence case in the Pretoria Supreme Court on 20 April 1964, Nelson Mandela  stated: “During my lifetime I have dedicated myself to this struggle of the  African people. I have fought against white domination, and I have fought  against black domination. I have cherished the ideal of a democratic and free  society in which all persons live together in harmony and with equal opportunities.  It is an ideal which I hope to live for and to achieve. But if needs be, it is  an ideal for which I am prepared to die”. 
        34 years  later, in his final speech to the General Assembly as President of South Africa  on 21 September 1998, Nelson Mandela stated: “We look forward to the resolution  of the outstanding issues of Western Sahara and East-Timor, convinced that it  is possible to take these matters off the world agenda on the basis of  settlements that meet the interests of all the peoples concerned”. 
        Let us  therefore work with renewed commitment and vigour to bring violations of  International Humanitarian Law in Western Sahara to an end; let us work to  relieve the suffering of the Sahrawi people and restore their human dignity;  and let us take decisive steps to close the chapter on this last vestige of  occupation and colonialism on the African continent.  
        I thank you. 
        ISSUED  BY THE DEPARTMENT OF INTERNATIONAL  RELATIONS AND COOPERATION 
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