Last week, shipments of phosphates arrived in the ports of Hobart and Geelong in Australia. The vessel above, Livadia, was seen arriving Tasmania 27 May 2011.
Image above: bulk vessel Livadia, seen on 27 May 2011 at anchor downstream from Hobart, Tasmania, Australia, loaded with phosphate rock from Western Sahara. See more images at the bottom of this story.
The Australia Western Sahara Association issued on 24 May 2011 the below press release.
Disputed phosphate shipped to Geelong and Hobart – Australian companies continue unethical trade
As the Triton Stork berthed in Geelong at 6pm Monday, the Australia Western Sahara Association denounced Australia’s trade with Morocco in phosphate sourced in the disputed territory of Western Sahara.
Earlier this month, Aicha Dahane, a Saharawi human rights activist from occupied Western Sahara added her voice to the protest about what superphosphate manufacturer, Incitec Pivot is doing in Geelong.
She said the trade in her country’s natural resources should benefit her homeland and its people. Indeed, Saharawis want to run this industry themselves and control their own natural wealth instead of seeing it make the colonial regime of Morocco grow rich.
For years the people of Western Sahara have been promised a referendum of self-determination by the United Nations, but Morocco has stymied attempts to organise a vote since 1975.
On Wednesday another phosphate shipment is due to arrive in Hobart on board the Livadia, this time for the Tasmanian-based company Impact Fertlisers.
“Australian companies and the government should clearly understand that they cannot support this trade so long as the conflict over Western Sahara remains unresolved”, said Cate Lewis, Vice President of AWSA. “With this phosphate trade our country is supporting the illegal Moroccan occupation while no country in the world recognises Morocco’s claim to this territory”, she added.
Further information:
http://www.awsa.org.au/
http://www.wsrw.org/
Contact: Cate Lewis (+61) 0407 288 358
The below images show Livadia arriving Hobart with cargo from Western Sahara.
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.
Over 200 million dollars worth of phosphate rock was shipped out of occupied Western Sahara last year, a new report from WSRW shows. For the first time, India is among the top importers.