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This is a list of national liberation movements recognized by intergovernmental organizations.

Background[edit]

The United Nations General Assembly, by resolution 3247 (XXIX) of 29 November 1974, decided to invite also the nationalist movements recognized by the Organization of African Unity (OAU, later transformed into the AU) and/or by the League of Arab States (AL) in their respective regions to participate in the United Nations Conference on the Representation of States in Their Relations with International Organizations as observers.[1]

The Conference adopted a resolution on the status of "national liberation movements",[2] and similar provisions were also adopted by the UNGA.[3][4]

The UNGA recognized some of these nationalist movements as representatives of the people of their respective territories, along with their right to self-determination, national independence and sovereignty there. In 1973 South West Africa People's Organization was recognized as representative of the Namibian people and gained UN observer entity status in 1976.[5] In 1974 the UN took similar decision for the Palestine Liberation Organization and it was also given the status of UN observer entity[6] The OAU and the UN have contacts with the Polisario Front[7] and the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (established by the Polisario Front) is member state of the OAU since 1982. Since 1991 the UN is maintaining a peacekeeping mission in Western Sahara overseeing a cease-fire between Morocco and the Polisario Front. The goal of the mission is to conduct a referendum on the status of Western Sahara.

The aim of these movements is to eventually establish independent states and some of them have already succeeded. After independence most of the liberation movements transform into political parties – governing or oppositional. The most recent of these that finished the process of decolonization in its territory was SWAPO that established Namibia in 1990.

The Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC, formerly the Organisation of the Islamic Conference) also recognized some nationalist movements.[8][9]

List[edit]

Nationalist movement Nation Territory Recognized by Current administering power Established state Former administering power
Southern Cameroon Liberation Movement Cameroonians Southern Cameroons Organisation of African Unity[citation needed]  Cameroon  United Kingdom
Moro National Liberation Front Moro people Mindanao[a] Organisation of Islamic Cooperation  Philippines  Spain
 United States
Turkish Muslim community of Cyprus Turkish Cypriots Northern Cyprus Organisation of Islamic Cooperation  Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (de facto)  Republic of Cyprus
Polisario Front Sahrawi people Western Sahara Organisation of African Unity  Spain (de jure)[b]
 Morocco (de facto)
 Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (de facto)
 Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic  Spain
Biafraland Government Biafrans Biafra Region UNICEF  Nigeria  Biafra  Nigeria
 United Kingdom

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Another Insurgency in the Philippines continues in the same region with the Islamist groups of Abu Sayyaf, Rajah Sulaiman Movement, Jemaah Islamiyah, Ampatuan and al-Khobar.
  2. ^ In 1976, Spain informed the UNSG that it had relinquished administrative control of Western Sahara and considered itself henceforth exempt from any responsibility of an international nature in connection with the administration of the said territory.[10] Nevertheless, the Criminal Chamber of the Spanish National Supreme Court ruled on 4 July 2014 that Spain, "de jure, although not de facto", remains the "administering power" of the non-self governing territory of Western Sahara and, as such, until the decolonization process is completed, it has the obligations under In Articles 73 and 74 of the United Nations Charter.[11]

References[edit]

External links[edit]