Could this be the start of a beautiful Western Saharan-South Ossetian  friendship? After securing recognition from Russia, Venezuela, Nicaragua and  Nauru, the breakaway region of South Ossetia has turned to the African continent  in search of friends and found one in the partially recognized Sahrawi Arab  Democratic Republic (SADR).
“Western Sahara de facto recognizes the  independence of South Ossetia. Now we have to formalize relations de jure, with  all that comes with it, including the establishment of diplomatic relations,”  the de facto SADR Minister for African Issues Mohamed Yeslem Beyssat was quoted  as saying by Russia's Regnum news  agency.
The Western Sahara, like South Ossetia, is a disputed  region whose claim to independence involves larger regional powers. Morocco  controls two-thirds of the territory, a onetime Spanish colony; some several  dozen countries -- including Nicaragua and Venezuela, both backers of South  Ossetia's independence -- have recognized the de facto Sahrawi Arab Democratic  Republic, now headquartered in Algeria, as an independent state.
Beyssat  was speaking at a September 26-27 international conference in Algiers that was  attended by an envoy from the de facto South Ossetian government who met with de  facto SADR officials. Both sides denounced Morocco (for the de facto SADR) and  Georgia (for breakaway South Ossetia) as aggressors for using force to try and  stamp out the territories' respective claims to independence.  
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