Standing with Western Sahara: Highlights from the 2025 EUCOCO 49th Conference
At the end of November 2025, Nonviolence International participated, together with a U.S delegation from the Western Sahara Solidarity Committee, in the 49th EUCOCO Conference in Paris. EUCOCO is one of the most significant annual gatherings dedicated to advancing solidarity with the Sahrawi people and their long-denied right to self-determination. The conference brought together European, Algerian, French, Spanish, Latin American, and African parliamentarians, alongside Sahrawi leadership, civil society organizers, trade unions, youth activists, and human rights defenders.

Representatives of the Polisario Front, including Bouchraya Hamoudi Bayoun, Sidi M. Omar, Oubi Bachir Bouchraya, and others, emphasized a unified message:
The struggle of Western Sahara remains the last unresolved decolonization process in Africa, and the international community has a legal, political, and moral responsibility to act.

Below are key takeaways from both days of the conference, including legal advances, civil society strategies, growing European engagement, and emerging campaigns that will shape solidarity efforts in 2026.
The Plundering of Natural Resources and the Landmark CJEU Ruling
The opening panel examined the October 2024 ruling of the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU), a historic affirmation that:
- Western Sahara is a non-autonomous territory
- Morocco has no sovereignty over Western Sahara
- The Polisario Front is the legitimate representative of the Sahrawi people
- EU-Morocco trade agreements cannot include Western Sahara without Sahrawi consent
Professor Carlos Ruiz Miguel outlined the legal foundations of the ruling, stressing that any EU trade activity involving goods from the territory must state “Western Sahara” as the country of origin, and must demonstrate real, traceable benefits to the Sahrawi people.
As Oubi Bachir Bouchraya detailed, Morocco continues to operate in the “third phase” of its occupation: economic expansion, after demographic and military control. Around €800 million in fisheries and resource exploitation continues to flow through agreements that violate international law. Participants drew parallels with similar strategies used to market goods from Israeli settlements, suggesting the need for strong consumer-focused campaigns.
The Responsibility of the UN, Spain, and France
Panelists emphasized that the Western Sahara issue remains an unfinished decolonization process, with Spain still holding the legal status of the administrating power. MEP Estrella Galán called attention to Spain’s unfulfilled historic obligations and announced coordination between the Spanish Parliament and the European Parliament to:
- Affirm support for Sahrawi self-determination
- Expose human rights violations in the occupied territories
- Pressure EU institutions to respect CJEU rulings
French deputies, including Jean-Paul Lecoq, criticized France’s role in blocking progress at the UN Security Council and expressed concern about the erosion of democratic debate within French institutions, while commending Algeria’s principled role in defending international law.
Fundamental Rights: The Human Impact of Occupation
The second day began by centering the human cost of the conflict:
- Drone attacks on civilians in occupied territories
- Systematic demographic engineering
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Disappearance and detention of political prisoners
Exploitation of natural resources (phosphates, fisheries, agriculture, sand, renewable energy) - Lack of international monitoring, including the absence of human rights components in MINURSO
As the conference closed, participants highlighted upcoming milestones, including the protest with all participants in the Place de la République right after the closing of the event, and the demonstration scheduled for December 10, in Brussels, in front of the European Parliament, which is mobilizing people from all over Europe.

The message of EUCOCO 2025 is clear:
Political will, not technical barriers, is what stands between the Sahrawi people and their right to freedom. The world must finally complete the decolonization of Western Sahara.
Nonviolence International remains committed to supporting Sahrawi nonviolent resistance, amplifying their demands for justice, and building global solidarity that turns legal victories into political and material change on the ground.
If you would like to get more involved in supporting our work on this issue, please contact us through the Western Sahara Solidarity Committee we
Photo: Nayef Hashlamoun Bilin, Palestine



