Morocco, Spain end rift after Madrid reverses stance on Western Sahara

Morocco's King Mohammed VI hosts Spain's PM Pedro Sanchez in a landmark visit ending a year-long diplomatic crisis, with both sides agreeing to turn a new page in ties, says Rabat.

Both nations moved to normalise ties after drawing a line under a bitter spat in mid-March when Madrid changed its position on Western Sahara, a disputed territory claimed by Rabat.
AFP

Both nations moved to normalise ties after drawing a line under a bitter spat in mid-March when Madrid changed its position on Western Sahara, a disputed territory claimed by Rabat.

Morocco and Spain have agreed to turn a new page in relations after Madrid supported Rabat's autonomy plan for Western Sahara, ending a year-long diplomatic crisis.

During Thursday's meeting in Rabat, King Mohammed VI and Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez "reiterated their willingness to usher a new phase, based on mutual respect, mutual trust, permanent consultation and frank and faithful cooperation," a Royal Palace statement said.

It also said Sanchez reaffirmed a position he had expressed last month, describing Morocco's autonomy plan for Western Sahara as "the most serious, realistic and credible" basis for solving the dispute over Western Sahara, a former Spanish colony Morocco considers as its own but where the Algeria-backed Polisario Front wants to establish its own state.

A joint Spain-Morocco statement said they will immediately resume sea travel.

Some three million Moroccans cross from Europe to Morocco during the summer, mostly using Spanish ports. Morocco has excluded Spanish ports for the last two years citing Covid-19 concerns.

READ MORE: US backs Morocco's plan to grant autonomy to rebellious Western Sahara

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Row over hosting Polisario Front leader

Moroccan-Spanish ties turned glacial when Spain admitted Polisario leader, Brahim Ghali, in April last year for medical treatment, without officially telling Rabat.

The Polisario Front and its ally Algeria reject the autonomy proposal and insist on holding an independence referendum.

Morocco fought a bitter war with the Polisario after Spanish colonial forces withdrew in 1975

In response to hosting Ghali, Moroccan authorities appeared to relax border controls with Ceuta, a Spanish enclave in northern Morocco, leading to an influx of at least 8,000 migrants, most of whom were later returned.

The two countries also agreed to resume normalcy in passenger and goods traffic on sea and land crossings.

The measure will provide a lifeline to the battered economies of two Spanish enclaves Ceuta and Melilla, which depend largely on trade with Morocco.

They also agreed to work together on the demarcation of Atlantic sea borders in addition to airspace management as well as to reinforce cooperation on migration, economy, energy, industry and culture.

Morocco had announced that it will start this month importing gas using Spanish LNG terminals by reactivating an idled pipeline.

Spain's stance on Western Sahara marks a policy shift in favour of Morocco's claim to the territory, but was criticised in Spain. 

A majority of lawmakers, including from the left- and right-wing opposition as well as Unidas Podemos, the junior government partner to Sanchez's Socialist Party, voted in a resolution against the foreign policy change.

Algiers last month recalled its ambassador from Madrid in protest at Madrid's U-turn, and state-owned energy giant Sonatrach warned on Friday it could increase the price of its gas sales to the country.

READ MORE: Algeria to stop gas exports to Spain via Morocco

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