Title: UNDP's mitigation strategy in Africa
1Cultural Heritage in the Sahara II
Archaeology Conflict in Western Sahara
Nick Brooks Tyndall Centre for Climate Change
Research University of East Anglia, Norwich NR4
7TJ. Email nick.brooks_at_uea.ac.uk Web
http//www.cru.uea.ac.uk/e118/welcome.htm
Western Sahara Project
2Geographical Political Context
- Former Spanish colony (Spanish Sahara) comprising
regions of Saguia el-Hamra Rio dOro - Spanish decolonisation 1974/75
- Moroccan/Mauritanian invasion 1975
- Subsequent Mauritanian withdrawal
- Claimed by Morocco Polisario1 (Sahrawi)
independence movement - Currenty partitioned into areas controlled by
Morocco Polisario by Moroccan wall or Berm - UN Observer force (MINURSO)
- Since 1991 ceasefire, tasked with organising
referendum on self-determination monitoring
ceasefire, recently organising family visits
across - Negotiations continue but prospects of settlement
remote - Return to conflict possible
Image from MINURSO website 1Popular Front for
the Liberation of Saguia el-Hamra Rio dOro
3Moroccan fortifications on the Berm, Northern
Sector
4Geographical Political Context
- Estimated 165,000 Sahrawi in refugee camps,
Tindouf, Algeria - Polisario government based in camps
- Control exercised over Free Zone
- Regular movement between camps Free Zone, e.g.
when rain pasture - Self-declared Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic
recognised by a number of governments, with full
diplomatic status in 13 countries, mostly in
Africa - Bitter propaganda war
Image from MINURSO website
5Barriers to research
- Access - particularly before 1991
- Travel to field - via Algeria or Mauritania
- Funding - funding bodies wary of politics
- Export of materials for analysis
- Lack of formal institutions for cooperation
- Long-term prospects - risk of conflict
- Lack of travel advice e.g. from FCO
- Risks - unexploded ordnance, landmines
- Lack of knowledge of Western Sahara as a region
in its own right - Sahara as an empty space
6Research context The Western Sahara Project
- Project work in Polisario-controlled areas
- Travel to field via Algeria and Mauritania
- Timeline
- Initiated by Margaret Raffin Nick Brooks
- First field season in 2002
- Jo Clarke Codirector with Nick Brooks since 2006
- 5 seasons of reconnaissance environmental
survey - 3 seasons of excavation detailed survey in
study area near Tifariti
- Aims
- To record sites contribute to general
understanding or archaeology - To examine human-environment interactions over
the Holocene (past 10,000 years), specifically
during the Middle Holocence Saharan desiccation
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8Previous/other work
- Some works published in Spanish colonial period,
prior to 1975 - E.g. Almagro Basch, 1945-46, 1946
- More recent current work
- Spanish teams (Girona, Bilbao, Granada)
- Little published
- Published work focuses on rock art
- No excavations, no environmental dating
- Recent intensification of research
9Still a very poorly known region
Archaeological sites containing cattle remains,
early to middle Holocene
Image courtesy of Hélène Jousse
10Archaeological background context
11Extraordinarily rich archaeological record
- Huge diversity of funerary monuments
- Greater than other Saharan regions, possibly
greatest in Africa - Many geographic/astronomical alignments
- Abundant rock paintings engravings
- Occupation sites lithics, ceramics
- Potential information on migration, prehistoric
livelihoods, adaptation, cultural evolution, etc - Many sites have great aesthetic qualities,
monumental landscapes - Monuments closely related to landscapes
- Huge repository of World Heritage
12Tifariti study area
13Tifariti study area
- Section of Wadi Tifariti 4.5 sq km
- 408 archaeological sites
- 15 different monument types
- At least 20 types in wider area
- Greater variety than N. Niger, Acacus (Libya),
other regions - Likely many more in W. Sahara
142005 excavations, Wadi Tifariti
2005 excavations, Wadi Tifariti
15Tumulus with annex standing stones, SE
alignment, Tifariti
16Stone ring, Tifariti
17Corbeille monument, Tifariti, E alignment
18Goulet or enclosure monument, Tifariti
19Giant goulet with E-W alignment, Tifariti
20Stepped monument, Wadi Erni
21Large humid climate fauna
Conical tumulus near Zoug
Photos from Wadi Mathandoush, Fezzan, Libya
22Tumulus field near Zoug
23Bazina monument near Zoug
24Crescent monument, near Lajuad
25V-type monument, near Bir Lahmar
26Tumulus field, near Zoug
Platform monuments, Lajuad
27Archaeology Conflict
28Construction at Rekeiz Lemgassem
29Graffiti at Polisario shelter, Rekeiz Lemgassem
30Post-conflict graffiti at Rekeiz Lemgassem
31All the Homeland or Martydom, Lajuad
32Graves of Polisario fighters, near Wadi Ternit
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34Polisario habitation, near Tifariti
35Painting inside boulder habitation
36Reworked monument, Wadi Ternit
37Some general observations
- Conflict associated with some direct damage
- However, little wanton destruction
- Sahrawi (Polisario) fighters use landscape in
ways that echo use by prehistoric people
(monuments, rock art) - Military personnel must be aware of many
archaeological sites - Pragmatic approach to these sites
- Since end of conflict, many sites (mostly rock
art) have been seriously damaged, by foreign
visitors, UN peacekeepers, local people (for the
most part not by Polisario military, apparently) - Despite limited damage to certain sites, conflict
has served to protect much Western Saharas
heritage by isolating it
38Relevance of archaeology to people conflict
- Significant support for archaeological work from
Polisario - So far, no attempts at directing research or
interpretation - Principle benefits appear to be
- Publicity
- Normalisation of SADRs relations with outside
world via foreign institutions - Demonstration of presence in management of
territory
- Other considerations
- Links between modern and prehistoric population
groups - likely tenuous - Role of archaeology and cultural heritage in
national identity - Similarities in modern prehistoric livelihoods
- pastoralism, mobility - Demonstration of ability to care for heritage
(c.f. Morocco) - Engagement of UN for World Heritage sites