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The Moroccan Regime Is “Trading” On The Sad Tragedies Of The Libyan People

Mohamed Meslem / English Version: Med.B.
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The Libyan Government dealt a resounding blow to the Moroccan regime, which is surprised by the announcement that the city of Bouznika will host a dialogue session between Libyan parties, without prior coordination with it, in an effort to achieve diplomatic gains at the expense of the unity of Libyans and the stability of their country, which has been experiencing a complex security and political crisis for more than a decade.

Al-Tahir al-Baour, who is in charge of the Libyan Foreign Ministry, criticized Alawite Foreign Minister Nasser Bourita for hosting a dialogue session between members of the House of Representatives and the High Council of State last Wednesday in Bouznika, Morocco, without prior coordination or following diplomatic procedures, according to a letter the Libyan official sent to his counterpart in the Moroccan regime.

In his letter, Al-Baour revealed that Mohamed Tekala and members of the State Council Presidency Office reported that they did not receive any notification or official communication regarding the holding of this meeting, which raises questions about the coordination methodology for such dialogues and the extent to which the Moroccan regime adheres to the diplomatic procedures applicable in such initiatives, which are supposed to bridge the gap between the parties at issue and not feed the conflict between them.

Following this, the Libyan government emphasized in the words of the charge d’affaires of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs: “We draw the attention of the Moroccan Foreign Ministry to the need for prior coordination with us to hold any meetings between Libyan parties on Moroccan territory to ensure that some parties do not engage in parallel tracks that confuse Libyan efforts to stabilize.”

Earlier, the head of Libya’s national unity government, Abdelhamid al-Dabiba, had harshly criticized the meeting of the parliament and the High Council of State outside Libyan territory, when they could have met in the capital Tripoli, he said, to avoid spending public money on pointless matters, as well as not allowing foreign parties to interfere in Libyan affairs, which would prevent the completion of the transitional stages in Libya, according to his words.

Since the beginning of the Libyan crisis, the Moroccan regime has been trying to poke its nose into it in a clear opposition to Algerian efforts, which aim to stabilize Libya to secure its sprawling eastern borders, despite the lack of any geographical connection between Libya and the Alawite Kingdom, which has no goal in such bidding, except to market a false image in the form of diplomatic breakthroughs for a regime that is in fact flabby, lacking legitimacy and legitimacy, inherited from the Middle Ages.

The Moroccan regime was keen to find a foothold in the crisis countries that neighbor Algeria. In addition to its “shuffling” in its eastern neighbor, Libya, it tried about a year ago to jump into the Sahel region, taking advantage of the disputes that the coup authorities in Mali created with Algeria by their decision to suspend the peace and reconciliation agreement signed in Algiers between the central government in Bamako and the Azawadian rebel movements in the north in 2015 under the auspices of the United Nations (UN).

The Moroccan intervention in the Sahel was ostensibly of a promising and humanitarian nature, by claiming to provide the countries of the region with access to the Atlantic Ocean through the occupied Sahrawi territories, in an attempt to jump the political and geographical facts, as well as to provoke Algeria and Mauritania, which refused to engage in the Moroccan maneuver, despite the calls and appeals they received from King Mohammed VI personally.

As is well known, Moroccan intervention in the region has fueled disputes between the existing regimes and their peoples, especially in Mali, which is back to square one, after the peace and reconciliation agreement signed in 2015 in Algiers succeeded in sparing the blood of the country’s people, before the security situation relapsed after the intervention of parties completely removed from the region.

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