A Thai owned, Danish operated vessel has recently arrived Colombia with phosphates from occupied Western Sahara.
23 of March 2009, the vessel Apisara Naree discharged 12.600 tonnes of phosphates in the port of Baranquilla, Colombia.
It had taken the vessel ten days to cross the Atlantic from the port of origin, El Aaiun in Western Sahara.
Western Sahara is occupied by Morocco, and trading phosphates from the territory, in the disregard of the Sahrawi people's interest and wishes is both considered highly unethical as well as in violation of international law.
The shipment took place without the consent of representatives of the Sahrawi people.
The Danish government encourages Danish companies to not get involved in trade from Western Sahara, but still the vessel Apisara Naree is operated by a Danish shipping company, Clipper Bulk, part of the Clipper Group.
Apisara Naree has IMO number 9127045, and sails under Thai flag. Owner is Precious Shipping from Thailand.
Previously the vessels discharging in Colombia have also discharged in Venezuela. It is not known whether this was the case with Apisara Naree.
However, there were something else interesting taking place in port of Baranquilla, Colombia, shortly after this import. First half of April 2009, two shipments with phosphate rock arrived Baranquilla from port of Puerto José, Venezuela. The first was on 2 April 2009, carrying 6500 tonnes, the other on 10 April 2009, carrying 9785 tonnes. The shipments were both done on Thai vessel Bussara Naree, IMO number 9127057. The actual origin of the phosphate rock is not known, but one could expect it to also origin from occupied Western Sahara.
Thai shipping company Precious Shipping has carried out 3 shipments from Western Sahara to Colombia in just over a year. WSRW asked today the company to halt the transports until the conflict is solved.
The export of phosphate rock from occupied Western Sahara has never been lower than in 2019. This is revealed in the new WSRW report P for Plunder, published today.
Morocco shipped 1.93 million tonnes of phosphate out of occupied Western Sahara in 2018, worth an estimated $164 million, new report shows. Here is all you need to know about the volume, values, vessels and clients.
Morocco shipped over 1.5 million tonnes of phosphate out of occupied Western Sahara in 2017, to the tune of over $142 million. But the number of international importers of the contentious conflict mineral is waning, WSRW's annual report shows.