Two months after its return to African Union, Morocco has demanded exclusion of Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic from ministerial meeting
As the meeting between the UN Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) and the African Union (AU) was set to start in Dakar, Senegal, Morocco called on Friday for the exclusion of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic from the conference citing that it is not a UN member state.
The meeting was supposed to prepare for the arrival of African ministers of economy on 27 and 28 March.
The Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic, or Western Sahara, is part of the AU but not part of the ECA and Morocco refuses to recognise SADR as a sovereign country.
The ECA and the AU announced on Saturday that as a consequence they had to postpone the ministerial meeting because the โconditions for the meeting not being metโ. The representatives of the 54 African countries as well as partner countries and organisations who were there had not even begun looking at the issues.
โThis crisis establishes a huge precedent. Morocco blew up the meeting,โ a disappointed diplomat told Middle East Eye.
Neither behind-the-scenes negotiations, nor the threat of seeing several delegations leave, nor the exceptional arrival of the Secretary-General of ECA succeeded in making Rabat back down.
The Sahrawi independence movement and Morocco have been fighting over the Western Sahara since 1975, when the former colonial powers withdrew from the region without organising a referendum for the Sahrawi people, leaving the issue unresolved to this day.
Legal loophole
โWe find ourselves in a complete stalemate because if the SADR had been excluded from proceedings, numerous delegations such as Nigeria, South Africa, or Algeria, heavyweights in the African Union, would have boycotted the meeting,โ the diplomat added.
It is not the first time that Morocco has demanded that the SADR be excluded from multilateral proceedings.ย But unlike now, Moroccoโs demands had been because the country was not part of the AU. However, the Western Sahara joined the AUย in January.
โThis crisis is unsolvable because the SADR, though a member of the AU, is not a member of the ECA. Therefore the latter has no mandate to exclude it. We find ourselves facing a legal loopholeโ, the diplomat continued.
An Algerian judge close to the Sahrawi dossier, contacted by MEE, said: โThe only thing the ECA can do to withdraw is to claim discord within the AU. For the rest, the argument raised by Morocco is not convincing. Indeed, sitting in the multilateral meeting with the SADR does not in any way oblige its recognition by the ECA or the UN. Algeria sits well next to Israel during UN meetings even though it will never recognise it.โ
According to him, the African Union Commission, an agent of the constitution of the organisation, has the power to โdenounce Morocco by saying that it violates its international commitments since Rabat ratified the AU constitution without reservations. But the AU constitution has an obligation for states to respect and defend the independence of other member states. And to a certain extent, to prevent a member state such as the SADR from participating in multilateral proceedings is a limit to its independence.โ
First signal to Addis Ababa
According to an African diplomat, Morocco โknows exactly what it is doingโ.
โIt couldnโt find a better place than Dakar because it knows that Senegal would support it. The objective was not to achieve the exclusion of the SADR today, but to mark the occasion. It is a way of saying: โWe did not come back to the AU to let ourselves be pushed aroundโ. In January, they arrived with big smiles. Then, they started to show their teeth. โ
A signal was already sent on 20 March to Addis Ababa, the Ethiopian capital, where AU is headquartered. Rabatย boycottedย the meeting of the African Union Peace and Security Council on the situation regarding the Western Sahara.
While the head of Sahrawi diplomacy called it the first โfailedโ test, a Moroccan diplomatic source quoted by the information websiteย Le Deskย judged the meeting to be โunproductive and one-sidedโ.
At the time of Moroccoโs return to the AU, the Algerian editorial writer Abed Charef had warned in MEE that two options were possible: โEveryone is preparing for the next jousts. For Morocco, it will be either waging a diplomatic war to reconquer lost land, which could lead the African Union into new and never-ending battles; or to step into an area which allows openings, by using African Union resolutions as a starting point for a new policy.ย โ
The Dakar meeting has shown that Rabat has chosen the first approach.