According to a UN press release published in July 2021, Sultana has been "repeatedly harassed by Moroccan authorities and lost an eye when attacked by a police officer in 2007".
[7] On 30 November 2021, Amnesty International issued an urgent action call "to put an immediate end to the brutal attacks against Sultana Khaya and her family and to carry out a prompt, thorough, independent, impartial, transparent and effective investigation into the security forces’ abusive force and attacks against her and her family, including the report of rape and sexual assault, and ensure that those suspected to be responsible are brought to justice in fair trials".
[8] Morocco's Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Omar Hilale, specifically denounced Sultana Khaya as "a supporter of violence" and for using "human rights for political ends", when he presented a letter to the UN on behalf of Morocco alleging that the Polisario Front fabricated reports of armed conflict and human rights violations against the Sahrawi people and incited violence in league with Algerian state media.
[13] As reported by Amnesty International, in one incident on 15 November 2021, plainclothes Moroccan security forces broke into Khaya's home, raped her, and sexually assaulted her sisters and mother.
[15] In March 2022, a delegation of US-based volunteers, which included the acting president of the Veterans for Peace, broke the 482-day siege of Khaya's home in Western Sahara by visiting her.