Sánchez speaks with the King of Morocco after supporting his proposal on the Sahara to close the crisis

Sánchez speaks with the King of Morocco after supporting his proposal on the Sahara to close the crisis



Call to the highest level to make clear the end of the crisis: Pedro Sánchez has spoken by telephone with the King of Morocco, Mohamed VI, in a new gesture of the recovery of relations after the president has printed a historical turn to the traditional position of Spain regarding the Sahara by supporting the autonomy proposal carried out by the Alaouite kingdom in 2007. That was the step that the Government had to take to put an end to one of the biggest diplomatic crises with the neighboring country after the reception of the leader of the Polisario Front, Brahim Galli, in a hospital in La Rioja to receive medical assistance. "We launched a roadmap that consolidates the new stage between two neighboring countries, strategic partners, based on transparency, mutual respect and compliance with agreements," the president said in a tweet.

I have spoken with His Majesty King Mohamed VI about relations between Spain and Morocco. We launched a roadmap that consolidates the new stage between two neighboring countries, strategic partners, based on transparency, mutual respect and compliance with agreements.

– Pedro Sánchez (@sanchezcastejon) March 31, 2022

Sánchez's conversation with the Moroccan king took place on the eve of the Foreign Minister, José Manuel Albares, who was the architect of the operation, traveling to Rabat to meet with his counterpart, Naser Burita, in what will be the first photo of the recomposition of relations between the two countries, although it has already had some milestones such as the communiqués of the kingdom of Morocco about the turn of Spain with respect to its former colony or the return of the ambassador to Madrid. One of the issues they intend to address during the meeting is Sánchez's future visit to Morocco.

The Sánchez government emphasizes the recomposition of relations with Morocco, a strategic partner of Spain especially in the control of migratory flows, in the face of the harsh criticism it has received from the entire parliamentary arch for the historic change with respect to the Sahara. All the parties, including United We Can, questioned the decision before Sánchez this Wednesday in Congress. The president defended that one cannot speak of change but of one "more step" along the path that José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero began by welcoming the Moroccan proposal that he considers the “most serious, realistic and credible basis” for resolving the conflict.

“I do not downplay the decision we have made now. I have taken it with the full desire to take a step forward”, he stated in Parliament before asking the groups to take into account the “complexity” of the problem. "We have reaffirmed and deepened our position precisely now because a new window of opportunity has just opened," he argued, referring to the appointment of a new UN special envoy.





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