Morocco, Cuba Re-establish Diplomatic Relations

Ads

 

Morocco and Cuba on Friday decided to re-establish diplomatic relations between the two countries, according to state-owned news agency, Maghreb Arab Press.

According to the same source, the decision was made in virtue of a memorandum of understanding between Morocco’s Ambassador to the United Nations and his Cuban counterpart on Friday in New York.

The decision was made a couple of weeks after King Mohammed’s private visit to Cuba. It was the Moroccan monarch’s first visit to the country since his coronation in 1999 and the first ever made by a Moroccan king.

Since the 1960’s relations between the two countries were marked by increased tension as a result of Cuba’s decision to side with Algeria during the war that Morocco-Algerian military conflict of 1963 known as the “Sand War.”

And in the 1970’s, Cuba chose again to side with Algeria in its support for the independence of the Western Sahara from Morocco.

Morocco severed its relations with Cuba back in 1980 as a result of Cuba support for the Polisario and its stance on the Western Sahara conflict.

Analysts regards this move as a major setback for the Polisario, which has for long considered Cuba as the bulwark of its secessionist agenda and among its fiercest supporters at the United Nations.

For the past four decades, Cuba has welcomed and trained scores of young Saharawis from the Tindouf camps.

The opening of a Moroccan embassy in Cuba and a Cuban embassy in Morocco will enable the two countries to reestablish the channels of dialogue and work for the betterment of the interests of their respective people.

Source: Morocco, Cuba Re-establish Diplomatic Relations