Western Sahara talks end in failure
Morocco and the Polisario Front agree on making family visits easier but little else.

“Among a number of proposals I made to expand confidence-building measures, there was agreement among the parties to explore the establishment of family visits by land, which would be in addition to the existing programme by air,” van Walsum said.
Slight advance
That represented a slight advance in a series of talks to resolve the 32-year dispute for control of the Western Sahara that have ended in stalemate, but no progress on fundamental claims of land ownership.
The UN-mediated talks, which followed earlier rounds in January as well as in June and August last year, brought together Morocco, the Algiers-backed Polisario as well as representatives of neighbouring Algeria and Mauritania.
Morocco has offered broad autonomy to Western Sahara, a mainly desert territory in north-west Africa, but the Polisario Front is seeking a referendum with the option of full independence.
On the eve of the fourth round of talks, Chakib Benmoussa, the Moroccan interior minister, made it clear that Rabat “only accepts autonomy and nothing but autonomy” for the Western Sahara.
‘Rigid positions’
Benmoussa blamed the continuing impasse on the Polisario Front’s “rigid, outdated positions”.
He said that Rabat remains committed to negotiations with the aim of reaching “a political solution that guarantees the return of all Saharawis to their motherland, Morocco”.
Ahmed Boukhari, a Polisario representative, said that “there was no substantial progress unfortunately” because of Morocco’s “rejection to the implementation to the right of self-determination”.
Both sides said they looked to the Security Council to heighten pressure for a solution.