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Western Sahara: the African Union put to the test by the SADR’s candidacy for the AU Peace and Security Council

According to The Panafrikanist, the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic’s (SADR) decision to run for the Northern Africa seat on the African Union Peace and Security Council (AUPSC) for the 2026–2028 term represents a major political turning point within the African Union (AU). What was expected to be a routine election is portrayed as a decisive confrontation that undermines Morocco’s long-standing position on Western Sahara and exposes the fragility of its neo-colonial narrative.

Political Significance of the Candidature

The election, scheduled for February 2026 during the AU Executive Council’s Ordinary Session, places the Sahrawi Republic in direct competition with Morocco and Libya. According to the article, the importance of this contest goes far beyond the outcome of the vote itself. Observers cited argue that SADR has already achieved a political victory by asserting its legitimacy, visibility, and institutional equality within the AU.

Collapse of Morocco’s Narrative

For decades, Morocco has claimed that the Sahrawi Republic does not exist and that the Western Sahara issue is a “closed case.” The article contends that Morocco’s participation in an electoral contest against SADR fundamentally contradicts this claim. By campaigning against the Sahrawi Republic in a formal AU process, Morocco implicitly recognizes it as a real political and institutional actor. This contradiction is described as a strategic defeat that precedes any electoral result.

Symbolism and Historical Context

The article emphasizes the symbolism of two parties to Africa’s last unresolved decolonization conflict competing within the AU’s key peace and security body. The Sahrawi Republic’s presence on the same ballot as Morocco is framed as a powerful reaffirmation of the AU’s founding principles: resistance to colonial domination, defense of self-determination, and sovereign equality among member states.

Morocco’s “Lose-Lose” Scenario

From a diplomatic standpoint, Morocco is depicted as trapped regardless of the outcome:

In all scenarios, the article asserts that Morocco loses the narrative battle.

Contrasting Records within the African Union

The article contrasts the two parties’ engagement with Pan-Africanism:

Broader Implications

The SADR candidacy is framed as a re-centering of decolonization within the AU’s political agenda. It demonstrates, according to the article, that diplomatic pressure and narrative manipulation cannot erase a people’s right to self-determination or institutional participation.

Conclusion

The article concludes that Morocco’s assertion that Western Sahara is a settled issue has effectively collapsed. By engaging in this election, Morocco has publicly acknowledged the Sahrawi Republic’s existence and endurance. Regardless of the vote’s outcome, the Sahrawi Republic is said to have already won the most critical struggle: the battle for legitimacy, truth, and Africa’s collective conscience.

Read also : African Union: Moroccan manoeuvres against the SADR (Western Sahara)

Read also : Morocco’s New Tango with the African Union

Read also : The Unspoken Realities of Morocco’s African Policy

#Western_Sahara #Morocco #African_Union #African_Union_Peace_and_Security_Council #AUPSC #Sahrawi_Arab_Democratic_Republic #SADR

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