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Tensions Grew High Between Morocco & Spain over Island

The disputed island

RABAT, July 12 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) – Spain and Morocco were locked in a heated military standoff Friday over a disputed troop presence on a small uninhabited island in the Mediterranean Sea, only 200 meters off the Moroccan coast. The European Union, meanwhile, jumped into the dispute Friday, siding with Spain.

For its part, Madrid announced it was strengthening its military presence on islands near Morocco. The move came after Rabat sent a dozen troops to the disputed island of Perejil,  known as Leila in Morocco, saying it was a mission to watch for illegal immigrants and terrorists.

Morocco rejected Spanish and EU demands that it withdraw its troops from the rocky outcrop, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).

A Moroccan government official said the troops had "every right" to be there, insisting that the island has been under Moroccan sovereignty since it was "liberated" in 1956, when the Spanish protectorate came to an end over the northern part of the kingdom.

The decision to set up an observation post was "neither a provocation or a threat towards Spain," the official said.

However, Spanish State Secretary for Foreign Affairs Miquel Nadal said the issue was "serious and worrying," further souring relations between two countries that spent this last year embroiled in several disputes.

Clandestine immigration to Spain from Morocco's coastline, the non-renewal of an EU fishing accord with Morocco, differences over Western Sahara and the prospecting for oil off Spain's Canary Islands are just some of the issues that pitted the two countries against each other in the past year.

Morocco's military presence on the island of Perejil is a "violation of Spanish territorial integrity" and a "sovereignty issue," said Gunnar Wiegand, a spokesman for EU External Relations Commissioner Chris Patten, AFP reported.

But the spokesman added that the dispute reached a "delicate stage" and that it should be resolved by Rabat and Madrid directly.

Spain protested the arrival Thursday of about a dozen soldiers who set up tents and raised the Moroccan flag over the tiny uninhabited island.

"It is not the role of the Commission, at this particularly delicate stage, to make public declarations," Wiegand said.

But he hinted that the European Union was ready to intervene if a solution is not found.

"A discussion within the European Union may become necessary if there is no bilateral solution found between Spain and Morocco," he said.

The 13.5-hectare (33.5-acre) isle is normally uninhabited and Rabat regards it within its own territorial waters.

Another EU official said he did not expect the dispute to get out of hand.

"I think that this can happen quickly," said Leonello Gabrici, the spokesman for Antonio Vitorino, the commissioner responsible for justice and interior affairs.

Relations between Spain and Morocco badly deteriorated in the past year, and in October 2001 the Moroccan ambassador to Spain was recalled. He has yet to be replaced.

The Spanish government said it had issued a formal protest over the presence of Moroccan troops, which it described as "a modification of the status quo and does not correspond to the wish to maintain friendly relations."

Spanish Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar and Defense Minister Federico Trillo, have held in-depth talks on the issue, leading Madrid daily newspaper El Pais reported.

The international status of the isle remained ambiguous since European states began decolonizing their African territories.

The island was once attached to the now-Spanish enclave of Cueta when the territory was in Portuguese hands.

When the enclave received autonomy from Madrid in the 1980s, the island was left out at Rabat's insistence and its sovereignty has been left clouded ever since.  

 

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