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EU-Morocco Future Relations in Limbo: Explaining the Trade-Migration Link

Morocco needs a clear and consistent signal from the European Union regarding the future relations with the country, said recently Moroccoโ€™s Minister for Agriculture Aziz Akhanuch, one of the most prominent politicians in the Moroccan government. He warned that Brussels must โ€œclarify its positionโ€ and reconcile the conflicting positions and the โ€œdisparityโ€œ regarding his country across the EU institutions. Mr. Akhanuch said that Morocco needed a โ€œpolitical signalโ€ that โ€œrecognized the role of Moroccoโ€ and the โ€œextraordinary effortโ€ it is making on its southern border.

Although the minister did not mention specific cases, he said that โ€œsome Moroccan boats have suffered disruptions in European portsโ€, which only strengthens the activities of โ€œour adversaries and enemiesโ€, in a tacit reference to the Polisario Front, a Sahrawi rebel national liberation movement aiming to end Moroccan presence in the Western Sahara. In mid-January this year, the ship Key Bay, which stopped in the Canary Islands to refuel, carrying a cargo of fish oil from the Sahara region, was inspected by the Spanish Civil Guard following a complaint by the United Left party, which said that the cargo from the Sahara was illegal.

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โ€œWe do not want to spend the rest of our mandate going to the courts in cities all around the EU,โ€ Ajanuch said and added that โ€œwe want to work, for our farmers not to live in uncertainty, not knowing what will happen from one day to the next when their agricultural and fisheries products reach the EUโ€™s borders. Mr. Ajanuch was in turn referring to the agricultural deal between both sides, which was quashed in December 2015 by a European court for having included the Western Sahara โ€“ the decision, which was partly overturned a year later. He also warned of the โ€œserious consequencesโ€ that will arise from โ€œobstaclesโ€ the EU puts in the way of the agricultural agreement.

Morocco also issued a strong-worded statement warning that any attempt to sabotage the Morocco-EU farm deal would have negative repercussions. โ€œActs aiming at blocking access of some Moroccan products to the European market should be sanctioned and treated firmly by our European partners,โ€ the statement released on 5 February read and especially stressed that โ€œany impediment to the implementation of this agreement threatens thousands of jobs on both sides and constitutes a real risk for the resumption of migratory flowsโ€.

And it is precisely this link between the EU-Morocco agricultural deal and the highly controversial issue of illegal migration that may prompt Brussels take Rabatโ€™s warning seriously. Thus, with Mr. Ajanuchโ€™s question โ€œHow will the Europeans block migration from Africa via Morocco if they refuse to work with us?โ€, he was clearly referring to the potentially negative consequences of an EUโ€™s boycott of Moroccan agricultural and fisheries products for EUโ€™s migration management. While most migrants from sub-Saharan African heading north to Europe have been travelling through war-torn Libya, scores of others have managed in recent years to enter Spain through Ceuta and Melilla, two Spanish enclaves located on Moroccoโ€™s Mediterranean coast.

Source: EU-Morocco Future Relations in Limbo: Explaining the Trade-Migration Link | EuBulletin.Com

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