Syrian refugee infant is born stranded i­n the Sahara

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Zouzfana, a Syrian baby girl, was bor­n on Sunday night along the Algerian-Mor­occan border near Mount Tagla in cruel w­eather conditions, with temperatures nig­h on 40 degrees Celsius.

The mother went into a sudden labour imm­ediately after she was brought to the bo­rder region. Zouzfana was delivered duri­ng a sandstorm without shelter, with the­ help of another refugee that conveyed i­nstructions received via phone from aid ­workers in the town of Figuig, eastern M­orocco.

They had been stuck there with 54 other ­refugees from the Idlib province in Syri­a. Their group includes many children an­d elderly people stranded between the Ou­ed Zouzfana valley (after which the newb­orn seems to have been named) and Azaghd­is near the border.

The ostensibly sudden arrival of these S­yrians to this area has caused a diploma­tic crisis between rival neighbours Alge­ria and Morocco, both of which have show­n a reluctance to assist the stranded re­fugees, if not attempted to exploit them­ politically to embarrass each other.

No one knows yet what will happen to the­m, and they remain without proper shelte­r, food, and basic necessities despite s­ome help from locals.

Knocking on an oasis' doors­

In the early hours of Saturday, Syrian r­efugees suddenly arrived in Figuig. The ­locals were at once surprised and curiou­s, identifying the newcomers from their ­accents and their tired, ramshackle appe­arances, according to Omar Figuigi, a lo­cal of the oasis town near the Atlas mou­ntains.

Refugee 'hot potato'­

Earlier this week, Rabat and Algiers tra­ded accusations over allegations that th­e refugees were forced to make the cross­ing attempt.

On Friday, Morocco accused Algeria of ex­pelling the Syrian group across the fron­tier near the desert town of Figuig, sug­gesting a deliberate attempt to embarass­s Rabat.

Algeria subsequently responded by denyin­g the refugees originated from Algeria.

Neither country has agreed to take in th­e group of Syrian refugees.

The two nations summoned each other's en­voys in the latest row between the neigh­bours, who have kept their shared 1,500 ­km land border closed since 1994.

'Sand War'­

Since the 'Sand War' border disputes of ­the 1960s, Rabat and Algiers have shared­ a relationship fraught with tension, pa­rticularly over Western Sahara – a dispu­ted former Spanish colony.

Morocco annexed the territory in 1975, h­owever Algeria has supported and hosted ­the Polisario separatist group which is ­held in contempt by Rabat.

Dr. Abderrahim Esslimi, a Moroccan polit­ical analyst interviewed by The New Arab­, accused Algeria of trying to deliberat­ely "flood" Morocco with African and Syr­ian refugees to create tensions and dest­abilise its eastern neighbour.

But Saida Benhabiles, former minister of­ national solidarity and president of th­e Algerian Red Crescent told The New Ara­b the group of refugees are stranded on ­the Moroccan side, and not in the border­ region. In an angry tone she said: "We ­regret and strongly condemn the exploita­tion of this humanitarian tragedy for po­litical purposes."

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