Tuesday, February 17 2026 - UN Secretary-General António Guterres has renewed calls for the full decolonisation of Western Sahara and 16 other territories that remain under colonial administration.
Addressing the 2026 session of the Special Committee on
Decolonisation (C-24), Guterres said the global body must recommit to
completing the work of ending colonial rule more than six decades after the
United Nations formally began its decolonisation agenda.
“This organization was founded as a forum where nations meet
as equals — not as rulers and the ruled,” he stated, stressing that
decolonisation has been central to the UN’s mission since its inception.
He warned that the legacy of colonialism continues to shape
modern societies, leaving behind deep economic exploitation, entrenched
inequality, racism, and the marginalisation of affected populations from
decision-making processes.
The C-24 was created by the UN General Assembly in 1961 to
oversee progress toward granting independence to territories that have yet to
achieve full self-governance under Chapter XI of the UN Charter. Its mandate
originates from the landmark 1960 Declaration on the Granting of Independence
to Colonial Countries and Peoples.
Guterres outlined key priorities for advancing the remaining
decolonisation efforts. He urged inclusive dialogue involving
non-self-governing territories, administering powers, UN member states, and
other relevant stakeholders. He also emphasised that each territory’s situation
should be handled individually, guided by the UN Charter, the 1960 Declaration,
and relevant General Assembly resolutions.
Since 1945, more than 80 former colonies representing
roughly 750 million people have achieved independence. However, Western Sahara
and 16 other Non-Self-Governing Territories, most of them small island
territories in the Caribbean and Pacific, remain on the UN list, with a
combined population of nearly two million.
Western Sahara is widely regarded as Africa’s last colony
yet to gain independence. Spain administered the territory, then known as
Spanish Sahara, until 1976, when it withdrew, triggering a prolonged dispute
involving Algeria, Morocco and Mauritania.

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