Yahoo – AFP,
July 18, 2016
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| Moroccan King Mohammed VI, pictured in February 2016, says his country want to rejoin the African Union (AFP Photo/Fadel Senna) |
Rabat (AFP)
- Morocco wants to rejoin the African Union, 32 years after quitting the bloc
in protest at its decision to accept Western Sahara as a member, King Mohammed
VI said Sunday.
Morocco
maintains that Western Sahara, a former Spanish colony, is an integral part of
the kingdom even though local Sahrawi people led by the Polisario Front have
long campaigned for the right to self-determination.
"For a
long time our friends have been asking us to return to them, so that Morocco
can take up its natural place within its institutional family. The moment has
now come," the monarch said in a message sent to an AU summit taking place
in Kigali, the MAP Moroccan news agency reported.
Morocco has
occupied the sparsely populated Western Sahara area since 1975 in a move that
was not recognised by the international community.
Morocco
quit the AU in protest in 1984 when the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR)
was admitted as a member.
But
although Morocco left the club, "it never quit Africa", King Mohammed
said in his message to AU leaders as they began a two-day meeting in the
Rwandan capital.
"Through
this historic act and return, Morocco wants to work within the AU to transcend
divisions," he added.
In 1991,
the United Nations brokered a ceasefire between Moroccan troops and Sahrawi
rebels of the Algerian-backed independence movement the Polisario Front but a
promised referendum to settle the status of the desert territory has yet to
materialise.
Earlier
this year Morocco expelled several UN staff members who were part of the
MINURSO mission in Western Sahara in angry retaliation over UN Secretary
General Ban Ki-moon's use of the term "occupation" to describe the
status of the territory.
In his
address to the African Union, King Mohammed urged the bloc to rethink its
position on the "phantom state" of Western Sahara, saying that a
political solution was being worked on under the auspices of the UN.
"The
recognition of a pseudo state is hard for the Moroccan people to accept,"
he said.
The SADR is
not a member of the UN or the Arab League, the king went on to note, adding
that "at least 34 countries" do not recognise it.
"On
the Sahara issue, institutional Africa can no longer bear the burden of a
historical error and a cumbersome legacy," the monarch said.
Morocco's
return to the AU would need to be validated by a vote.


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