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Royal visit revives tensions between Spain and Morocco
By Marcus Morgan and Paul Bond
6 December 2007
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A royal visit by King Juan Carlos and his wife Queen Sofia
to the disputed Spanish enclaves of Ceuta and Melilla on the coast
of Morocco elicited a sharp rebuke from the Moroccan government.
The enclaves are the oldest remnants of Spanish colonial territory
in North Africa, and remained under Spanish control when Morocco
gained its independence.
At the request of Moroccos King Mohammed VI, his countrys
ambassador to Spain was recalled for an indefinite period in response
to the visit. A spokesman said the government expressed its strong
rejection and total disapproval of this regrettable initiative.
King Mohammed also denounced the visit personally, saying, it
undermines the feelings of Moroccans.
The last Spanish royal to visit the enclaves was Alfonso XIII,
in 1927. Juan Carlos had visited the Moroccan capital Rabat early
last year. Relations between the two countries have been improving
in recent years, although a visit to Ceuta and Melilla by Socialist
Party Prime Minister José Luis Rodriguez Zapatero last
year also attracted criticism.
Zapateros government consulted with Rabat about a royal
visit to the enclaves. The trip was apparently the idea of the
king himself, who described it as his duty. The Moroccan
government did not refuse permission, but its subsequent hostile
response has alarmed the Spanish government.
Insisting that Spain wanted the best possible relations
with Rabat, Foreign Minister Miguel Angel Moratinos said that
ties between the countries are solid. Deputy Prime
Minister Maria Teresa Fernandez de la Vega called relations with
Morocco extraordinarily good, saying they were based
on sincere affection and mutual respect. Madrid insists
that normal relations will return shortly.
The Moroccan government was protesting not just the visit itself,
but its timing. It coincided with the Green March
celebration, a national holiday marking the Spanish withdrawal
from the southern territory in 1975. Juan Carloss description
of the enclaves as an integral part of our national territory
was highly provocative. Moroccan Prime Minister Abbas El Fassi
warned that Spain must understand that its colonial era
is over and for good.
The visit provoked demonstrations outside the Spanish embassy
in Rabat and on the border with Melilla. More than a thousand
demonstrators protested at the Moroccan border with Ceuta.
The administrations of the regions organised demonstrations
welcoming the royal visit. The president of Ceuta, Juan Jesus
Vivas, said that Moroccan reactions would not alter the
sense of satisfaction at the visit. Melillas president,
Juan José Imbroda, was even more bullish, calling the visit
a totally Spanish act, within the Spanish nation, with the
sovereignty of Spain, and which only affects Spaniards.
This line, asserted by Juan Carlos, was echoed in the right-wing
Spanish press. An editorial in El Mundo said that the visit
would reaffirm Spanish sovereignty over the two autonomous
territories. They have had the status of autonomous regions
in the Spanish government since 1995.
Ceuta and Melilla are two of the last remaining outposts of
the old Spanish empire. They remain strategically and militarily
important to Spanish interests because of the significant trade
that passes through from North Africa to Europe and the worlds
shipping lanes, situated on the Straits of Gibraltar. Most of
the industry in the towns is fishing and shipyards.
The enclaves are also one of the main routes through which
African immigrants attempt to enter the European Union. Frontex,
the EU security agency assigned to control immigration, has a
large contribution of resources from the Spanish Civil Guard,
mostly in the form of patrol boats.
Security in the area has been greatly tightened in the last
few years to control the rising number of economic migrants and
refugees. Many hundreds have been turned away or held in detention
camps before being deported. Last year, dozens were killed and
injured on the fences by security guards, and some have died of
thirst in the desert.
Morocco is heavily dependent on Spain for its export market,
and Spain has invested extensively in Morocco. Despite this, there
have been repeated diplomatic crises, especially over access to
fishing and territorial claims over the islands in the region.
There is ongoing prospecting for new oil deposits around the
islands. In 2002, frictions reached a boiling point when Morocco
landed troops on a rocky and seemingly insignificant outcrop and
planted its flag. Spain reacted by arresting some Moroccan soldiers
with a military detachment and releasing them only when Morocco
agreed to leave the islet, which is used by herdsmen to graze
their goats.
The royal visit is an indication that Spain is not prepared
to relinquish control of these strategically important regions,
despite Moroccos best efforts to secure concessions from
its former imperial overlords. Living standards in Morocco compare
unfavourably to neighbouring Algeria and Tunisia.
The main challenge to Spains interests in Morocco does
not come from the usually pliant regime in Rabat, but from Paris.
France is now Moroccos biggest trading partner. French President
Nikolas Sarkozy visited the country earlier this year to strengthen
trading ties between the countries. He brokered deals on a wide
range of heavy industrial projects, including a new train line
between Casablanca and Tangier to be built by the French Alstom.
This may have been behind Moroccos newfound boldness
in reasserting its claim to the territories, but it has also encouraged
the Spanish ruling class to make a show of strength in order to
reassert its control ahead of next Marchs general election.
The Socialist Party (PSOE) governments part in these events
is a clear effort to appease the right wing in Spain.
See Also:
New law condemning Francos
crimes further polarises Spain
[21 November 2007]
US and European leaders
court North Africa
[15 December 2003]
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