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EU-Morocco fish talkers ignored Sahrawi problem
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On 2 February 2010, representatives of the European Union and Morocco met in Rabat to analyze the problems of the EU-Moroccan Fisheries Partnership Agreement (FPA). The meeting never raised the opinions of the Sahrawi people, despite the fact that most of the fisheries take place offshore their land.
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The annual meeting between the EU and Morocco, dubbed joint-committee, aims to follow-up on issues that may arise regarding the application of the fisheries cooperation. The main challenge of the legality of the fisheries cooperation, is that the EU fisheries take place in Western Sahara, a territory which is treated by the UN General Assembly as a colonial issue, and which is under illegal Moroccan occupation.

But sources of the European Commission have assured the Spanish news service Efe that the question of Western Sahara was not on the agenda of the latest joint committee meeting, because – the same sources stated - the meeting in Rabat was meant to review the application of the agreement, not to renegotiate it.

Yet it is precisely the application of the agreement that is at the heart of a recent Legal Opinion written by the European Parliament.

The new Legal Opinion from the Parliament strongly questions the legality of the Fisheries Agreement with Morocco for not being beneficial to the people of Western Sahara, and strongly urges the next committee meeting to discuss how the agreement can be applied to make sure it is in line with international law.

The EP’s Legal Opinion is in line with what has become known as the Corell Opinion, the Legal Opinion on exploration and exploitation in Western Sahara issued by the UN in 2002. The UN’s legal service then concluded that any economic activities that are not in accordance with the wishes and interests of the people of Western Sahara would be in violation of international law.

Given the lack of evidence that the Saharawi people have been consulted or have benefited from the current EU-Moroccan FPA, the EP’s Opinion strongly recommended that these concerns were to be raised in the next EU-Moroccan joint-committee meeting.

The new Legal Opinion by the Parliament’s Legal Services was issued on July 2009, and was supposed to be debated in the Parliament’s Fisheries Committee only one week prior to the Joint Committee meeting in February. However, the public debate in the Fisheries Committee was dropped off the agenda at the very last minute.




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The EU considers to pay Morocco to fish in occupied Western Sahara. An EU-Morocco Fisheries Agreement from 2013 would be both politically controversial and in violation of international law. The international Fish Elsewhere! campaign demands the EU to avoid such unethical operations, and go fishing somewhere else. No fishing in Western Sahara should take place until the conflict is solved.
عريضة لوقف النهب

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يحضر الاتحاد الاوربي لإبرام اتفاق غير اخلاقي جديد للصيد البحري مع المغرب في سنة 2013.

مرة اخرى، يعتزم الاتحاد الاوربي الصيد في المياه الاقليمية للصحراء الغربية المحتلة في خرق سافر للقانون الدولي. وقع هذه العريضة للتنديد بذلك.

"EU fisheries in Western Sahara must be stopped"




Western Sahara human rights activist Aminatou Haidar hopes for increased attention to the EU plundering of occupied Western Sahara.

READ ALSO

10.04 - 2012
Guardian: EU taking its over-fishing habits to west African waters?
15.12 - 2011
EU Observer: Morocco expels EU fishing boats
15.12 - 2011
BBC News: Morocco's fish fight: High stakes over Western Sahara
15.12 - 2011
European Voice: MEPs reject EU-Morocco fisheries pact
15.12 - 2011
Reuters: EU lawmakers reject Morocco fisheries pact






Human rights activist Malak Amidane denounces EU fisheries