
I am a Sahrawi woman
This is the reality of women of the same nation who live divided by the wall that has separated them for 35 years now. Exiled Sahrawi women who live in the refugee camps in Tindouf (Algeria) have a 88% representation rate in teaching and in healthcare, and 9% in government, evidence that they are the fundamental pillar of society. The ones who remained in the occupied territories of Western Sahara are part of every aspect of the struggle and activism against Moroccan occupation. They protest at the intifadas, they research the plunder of their natural resources, they paint flags, write pamphlets and they belong to the organisations that defend Sahrawi human rights in Western Sahara. These women: former prisoners, formerly missing, activists, today are tortured, harassed, followed, surveilled and violated simply for defending their legitimate right to freely express themselves in favour of Western Sahara’s independence.
You may like

The mirror bird

El Túnel

Mabel

Sahrawis, between occupation and exile

Backlash: Misogyny in the Digital Age

Our Body

The Untold Story

Daughter of the Crater

The Pimp’s World

The Executive Empress

The Golden Girls: Their Greatest Moments

Now That the Sun Begins to Set

Freedom of Inês Etienne Romeu

Feminino e Barulho

Ethel

Your Life Without Me

Desert PHOSfate

Raise Her Up: Celebrating a Century of Votes

Human Flow

For Sama

Night Will Fall

The Cave

49 Up

Thought Crimes