Category Archives: Catherine Constantinides

Highlighting the work of my Superhero Catherine Constantinides

Catherine Constantinides and 67 Blankets -a Godsend to the People of the Booysens Informal Settlement

Catherine Constantinides on the Booysens Informal Settlement [Image source: Instagram/@ChangeAgentSA]

“Legacy is determined action you take every single day.” – Catherine Constantinides

Recently 500 families living in the Booysens Informal Settlement in Johannesburg, South Africa  sadly lost everything in a devastating fire but thankfully people like My Superhero  Catherine Constantinides exist and she and other people and organizations have been at the Booysens Informal Settlement since the first day of the fire providing aid and comfort to the residents. A special thanks to Carolyn Steyn and her team at 67 Blankets for partnering with my Superhero Catherine Constantinides to provide beautiful hand-knitted blankets to the fire survivors of the Booysens Informal Settlement

Dear Superhero Catherine Constantinides,

I have made no secret of the fact that I think you are a one-of-a-kind human exemplary in your kindness, generosity and compassion. I truly believe the sun rises and sets wherever you happen to be. Love you to the moon and more than the stars.

Your Always SuperProud SuperSidekick, Nisha

The Winds of War have come to settle in the Sahara

By: Catherine Constantinides

Guerguerat – The people of Western Sahara remain forgotten, put aside, goal posts shifted and moved decade after decade and this unresolved conflict remains a scar on the conscious of Africa and world leaders who have been seated at the table.

The issue of Western Sahara remains firmly hushed into the silent background of the United Nations and African Union where the status quo has been cemented in place because it serves an elite few who benefit from the occupation by the Moroccan regime.

Moroccan armed forces moved with military aggression into the buffer zone, the non-militarized Saharawi territory of Guerguerat, this is in direct violation of the UN ceasefire agreement which has been in place since 6th September 1991. It was in the early hours of Friday, 13th November 2020, when Moroccan armed forces brutally attacked unarmed, peaceful Saharawi civilians and demonstrators in the buffer zone in the south-end of the territory, to open the road blocked by Saharawi activists who reached Guerguerat on the 20th of October 2020, when they began a peaceful demonstration at the illegal breach of Guerguerat, not far from the Berm, also known as the ‘Wall of Shame’.

These demonstrators aimed to denounce the illegal exploitation and movement of the natural resources of Western Sahara. Additionally, to give light to the human rights violations that occur daily in the occupied territory.

Morocco’s deliberate action has forced the Polisario back into an armed conflict. It has signaled a new chapter and moment in history for the liberation of the Saharawi people. And there can be no turning back, after waiting for a peace-led process by the United Nations Mission for the Referendum of Western Sahara, MINURSO. Almost 30 years later, a lack of political will and with no referendum in sight, the UN mission; MINURSO- which was tasked to organize and monitor the referendum for the self-determination of the Saharawi people of Western Sahara has failed.

Additionally, it must be noted that MINURSO is the only peace keeping mission in the world that does not monitor human rights, thus the ongoing violation of human rights in the occupied territory has gone unnoticed. This is a vile failure on the part of the UN as there have been ongoing calls for a human rights mandate under MINURSO for years by the international community, human rights organisations and activists alike.

Following the military attack on the Saharawi territory the Saharawi government has now declared the entire territory of Western Sahara “including its terrestrial, maritime and air spaces, a war zone”, thus advising all countries and economic operators to steer away from the territory.

It’s been widely reported that the situation in occupied Western Sahara has been classified with continued force, intimidation, harassment, torture, forced house arrest, beating of activists and those that have taken to the streets to protest in support of the inalienable right to self-determination. It must be noted that the youngest arrest was a young child of 12 years old. Hayat Diya, was abused and tormented on the 16th November 2020 in the occupied city; El-Aaiun at her school ‘Nahda High School’ for wearing an apron carrying the Saharawi Arab Democratic Republic flag. Hayat was taken to the police station where she was subjected to psychological and physical torture and sexual harassment. These criminal, anarchic acts have impacted this young girl in every way. This sickening behaviour on this innocent child are categorically irreconcilable with Article 13 of the 1989 Convention on the Rights of The Child and the Fourth Geneva Convention relating to the Status of Children During Armed Conflict.

Let us also note the harassment against journalists Ahmed Ettanji and Nazha El Khalidi on their wedding day on November 21st. Ahmed has been placed under house arrest and Nazha has been detained in her home. Their homes respectively were forcibly blockaded, electricity to their homes cut, doors barred from the outside and they have been prevented from leaving. Both well-known journalists at independent media house Equipe Media, have done extensive work to document the persecution of the press in the occupied territory in Western Sahara by the Moroccan security services.

It’s of paramount importance that urgent action be taken as a matter of emergency. This armed conflict brings instability to the region and uncertainty to the Sahel. The Saharawi people have been patient, persistent, respectful of process and procedure, but being dragged back into an armed conflict because Morocco broke the ceasefire agreement leaves the Polisario with no alternative but to stand and defend their people, their land and their fight for the most basic human right, their right to life, liberation and freedom. The allies of Western Sahara must continue to stand against the illegal occupation, colonization, oppression and heinous crimes against humanity that the Saharawi suffer on a daily basis.

The call to action is as follows:

1. We call for Morocco to immediately put an end to its expansionist and colonialist behaviour in Western Sahara, withdraw from the occupied territory and respect its internationally-recognised borders. Morocco’s violation of its neighbour borders is a direct violation of international law and of one of the core principles of the African Union Constitutive Act.

2. We call on the United Nations to set a date in order to enable, within a reasonable time frame, the organization of a referendum allowing the Saharawi people to exercise their legitimate right to self-determination unambiguously and in a democratic manner. We stand firm in our stance for self-determination and call for urgency in this matter.

3. We call on the United Nations Security Council to hold urgent meetings to address the new Moroccan military aggression and illegal territorial expansion, and stop the escalating situation and armed conflict on the ground.

4. We stand against the human rights abuses, harassment and unlawful imprisonment, unlawful house arrest, intimidation and torture taking place against the Saharawi people and condemn this form of violence and inhumane behaviour. We call on the UN and on the International Committee of the Red Cross to immediately intervene in the occupied territories of Western Sahara to protect and monitor the humanitarian and human rights situation of the Saharawi civilians in the occupied territories, being a war-zone: it must be treated under the Geneva Fourth Convention.

5. We demand for the immediate release of all political prisoners.

6. Economically, we must support economic co-operation not occupation. South Africa must stand behind ending illegal exploitation of the natural resources such as phosphate deposits, fisheries and arable land by their trade partners in economic deals that have not included or engaged with the people of Western Sahara. Not forgetting the European Union Court of Justice verdict of December 2016 which concluded that agreements between the EU and Morocco don’t apply to Western Sahara and its resources as the latter is a distinct country not part of the Kingdom of Morocco.

Morocco must accede to the legitimate demands and inalienable right to self-determination for the people of Western Sahara. The kingdom has no valid claim to the territory, Western Sahara remains under illegal military occupation by Morocco, a country that has repeatedly demonstrated its profound contempt for international law and the United Nations, and remains a brutal occupying power.

Let us be clear, this is a war for liberation, the Polisario cannot return to a failed ceasefire agreement that did not serve the legitimate rights of the people of Western Sahara and took from them thirty years in vain, the time is now. This must be the final chapter in the fight for liberation, justice and freedom!

Catherine Constantinides is a Board Member of The Saharawi Commission for Human Rights and an International Human Rights Defender and Climate Activist.

@ChangeAgentSA

Generation Earth and the VTAC Green Team Green Houghton Primary School

Co-founder of Generation Earth, Catherine Constantinides, planting trees with Vision Tactical and VTAC Green

“The care of the Earth is our most ancient and most worthy, and after all, our most pleasing responsibility.”― Wendell Berry

Recently Generation Earth together with VTAC Green Team and Vision Tactical planted trees at Houghton Primary School with the Grade 7 learners.

A huge thank you to the VTAC Green Team for partnering with Generation Earth to make this tree planting possible

The other co-founder of Generation Earth, Ella, Bella, also planting trees with the Miss Earth South Africa girls
VTAC Green Team

Celebrating My Superhero Catherine Constantinides and Her Values

“Leaders don’t just get listed in history books they live amongst us. The world awaits our great contribution.” – Catherine Constantinides

Today is one of my favorite days of the year because it’s my Superhero Catherine Constantinides’s birthday I’ve never been the kind to get awestruck by people but whenever I’m around My Superhero or am talking to her on the phone I turn into a child excited by Christmas morning and I allow myself to be that way only around her and for her – she deserves to know every day that she is adored by me. Happy Birthday Superhero I LOVE YOU to the moon and more than the stars.

In the video below I talk about the values I love most in My Superhero Catherine Constantinides

[Watch] Inspiring Humanitarian Catherine Constantinides Chats to Entrepreneur Allegro Dinkwanyane

“We need to live a life where we can look back and say we took people with us.” – Catherine Constantinides

Recently Entrepreneur Allegro Dinkwanyane chatted to Humanitarian and MY SUPERHERO Catherine Constantinides I learned so much from their conversation that I just had to share it.

Catherine Constantinides Remembers Saharawis Tortured by the Moroccan Regime #InternationalDayAgainstTorture #StandInTheSand

torture/ˈtɔːtʃə/

noun

  1. the action or practice of inflicting severe pain on someone as a punishment or in order to force them to do or say something.

Today on the International Day in Support of Victims of Torture my Superhero Catherine Constantinides paid a moving and heartbreaking tribute to the Saharawis of the Western Sahara who have been are currently are being tortured by the Moroccan Regime. The video touched me so much I HAD TO SHARE It – in honour of all those who have been tortured or are being tortured currently in occupied Western Sahara and elsewhere

Africa’s forgotten refugees: The people of Western Sahara

By Catherine Constantinides and Vitalio Angula

World Refugee Day falls each year on June 20th and is dedicated to refugees around the globe. World Refugee Day was held globally for the first time on June 20, 2001, commemorating the 50th anniversary of the 1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees. It was originally known as Africa Refugee Day, before the United Nations General Assembly officially designated it as an international day in December 2000. Each year, World Refugee Day is marked by a variety of events in many countries around the globe in support of refugees.

The people of Western Sahara continue to be the forgotten people of Africa and the world. Little is written about when it comes to the Saharawi refugee crisis, yet this situation is one of the most protracted conflicts in the world, the Saharawi refugee communities endure their 45th year of displacement.

According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) report of  March 2018, titled “Saharawi Refugees in Tindouf, Algeria: the total In-camp population”, which is the number of Saharawi refugees displaced as a result of Mauritania and Morocco’s invasion of the country in 1975 sits at 173 600 according to the last report. The refugees have been accommodated in five camps namely: Awserd (36 400); Boujdour (16 500) Dakla (19 500); Laayonne (50 500) and Smara (50 700) in the neighboring state of Algeria.

Last year, the African Union had declared the year 2019 as the year of ‘Refugees, Returnees and Internally Displaced Persons: Toward Durable Solutions to Forced Displacement in Africa’. This according to the A.U. report was in recognition of the 6.3 million refugees and 14.5 million Internally Displaced People (IDP’s) across the continent.” The African continent is also home to 509 900 asylum seekers and 712 999 stateless persons according to the African Union.

According to information provided by the Sahrawi Red Crescent; an Aid Agency founded on the 26 November 1975 to help refugees and provide assistance to disaster victims, ‘Sahrawi refugees have become more vulnerable over the years due to a considerable number of factors like the extreme weather conditions in the territory, the prolonged period of time the refugees have been displaced with no clear solution being sought for the humanitarian crisis, and the dwindling aid being provided by international organizations to cushion the appalling conditions the refugees find themselves in’.

Western Sahara, a desert territory on the West Coast of Northern Africa experiences extremely hot summers with temperatures that reach above 50 Degrees Celsius while during winter the temperatures fall to below 0 Degrees Celsius for prolonged periods of time.

Periodic sandstorms also pose a constant hazard to the more than 173 600 Sahrawi refugees who have been denied their homeland by the cruel Moroccan regime; which still refuses to recognize the Sahrawi people’s right to self-determination, as per the United Nations Mission for the Referendum in Western Sahara (MINURSO), as established by the Security Council resolution 690 of 29 April 1991.

With the World Food Programme (WFP) financial assistance to Western Sahara dwindling over the years, access to food and nutrition becomes ever more critical to the displaced populations of Africa’s last colony. The most recent UNCHR/WFP nutrition survey indicates that 25% of children under the age of 5 suffer from malnutrition. Additionally, Anemia or iron-deficiency anemia, caused by a low level of iron in the body as a result of an insufficient diet is diagnosed within 53% of children under the age of 5 years old.  The global average is also worrisome, as malnutrition is cited as the cause of death for half the children under the age of 5 years.

The crisis of Western Sahara is a representation of a global crisis that needs to be addressed if the Sustainable Development Goal 2 (SDG) of ZERO HUNGER worldwide is to be realized.

A Food Security Assessment conducted by the WFP describes 30% of the total Saharawi refugee population as food insecure with a further 58% of that population at risk of food insecurity.

But with virtually no rain for most of the year, Saharawi refugees only have access to an average of 14 litres of drinkable water per person per day; this is six litres below the global benchmark (humanitarian standard) of 20 litres of water per person per day.

Poor infrastructure, a shortage of medicine, and the lack of adequate medical equipment are challenges encountered by medical personnel tasked with managing health centres within the refugee camps which house Western Sahara’s displaced population of refugees, who have been living in this ‘temporary’ refugee setting since 1975.

We need to ensure a constant focussed and deliberate action that ensures the “inalienable right of self-determination” for the people of Western Sahara.

In the middle of the Sahara Desert, there are thousands upon thousands of Saharawi refugees forgotten by the world and forgotten by our own continent of Africa.

This remains a crisis that requires political will and determination to see justice for a people, 45 years later, and still no end in sight. The challenges are insurmountable, and the silence of this issue continues to be of grave concern.

Catherine Constantinides is an international climate and social justice activist and Human Rights defender. She tweets at @ChangeAgentSA.

Vitalio Angula is a socio-political commentator and an independent columnist.

Featured image via Twitter.

#WorldRefugeeDay 2020 and the Western Sahara. #StandInTheSand #WithRefugees

Catherine Constantinides in a classroom in Saharawi Refugee Camp (image captured by Heinrich Knoetze)

Nobody chooses to be a refugee – that’s what I want the world to remember

Tomorrow is World Refugee Day – a day when the world pauses to remember that one percent of humanity is displaced (according to the UN High Commission for Refugees). Today and every day I stand by my statement that Morocco’s 45-year illegal occupation of the Western Sahara is WRONG and CRIMINAL! #FreeWesternSahara . #StandInTheSand with Catherine Constantinides and I as we stand in solidarity with the people of Western Sahara now & always. May we never forget that NOBODY IS A REFUGEE BY CHOICE. Show some compassion. Show your heart.

A view of the Saharawi Refugee Camps (image captured by Heinrich Knoetze)
The gift of presence (image captured by Heinrich Knoetze)

[WATCH] Active Citizenship 101 | Catherine Constantinides | TEDxWaterfallDrive

Catherine at TEDxWaterfallDrive in Feb 2020 [BEFORE COVID19]

“What do you do to lead from where you are?” – Catherine Constantinides

Recently I watched “Active Citizenship 101” – a TedxWaterfallDrive talk by International Climate Activist and Human Rights Defender Catherine Constantinides (the event took place in February 2020 BEFORE COVID19) – I LOVE this talk because it’s filled with actionable advice.  Watch “Active Citizenship 101” by Catherine Constantinides below:

Catherine Constantinides Participates in the Nelson Mandela Foundation’s #Each1Feed1 Food Distribution in the North West

Catherine Constantinides lending a hand at the #Each1Feed1 distribution in the North West [image from the Nelson Mandela Foundation]

“As long as poverty, injustice and gross inequality persist in our world, none of us can truly rest.”- Nelson Mandela

Last Saturday My Superhero Catherine Constantinides continues to make me immensely proud – she was in the North West today with the Nelson Mandela Foundation supporting the foundation’s #Each1Feed1 Campaign

To find out more about #Each1Feed1 Campaign please visit https://www.nelsonmandela.org/each1-feed1