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So-Called 'sadr' Does Not Exist (EU Foreign Policy Chief)

So-Called 'sadr' Does Not Exist (EU Foreign Policy Chief)

"None of the member states of the European Union recognizes the sadr," Borrell wrote in a response to an MEP, published on the European Parliament's website, stressing that its "participation in the [EU-AU] Summit does not change the position of the European Union and its member states."

"This has no impact on the position of the European Union," he insisted, noting that the EU's position on the Sahara issue is well known and remains unchanged.

The EU, he added, "strongly supports the efforts of the UN Secretary-General and his Personal Envoy Staffan de Mistura to continue the political process aimed at achieving a just, realistic, pragmatic, lasting and mutually acceptable political solution to the Sahara issue [...] on the basis of compromise and in accordance with the UN Security Council resolutions, in particular Resolution 2602 of October 29, 2021."

In a question, which was addressed to Borrell on the eve of the European Union-African Union summit held on 17 and 18 February in Brussels, MEP Tomáš Zdechovský had stressed that the presence of the polisario was contrary to the values and principles of Europe on human rights and democracy.

He had recalled, in this regard, that the situation in the Algeria-controlled Tindouf camps is marked by many human rights violations, adding that these camps have become a breeding ground for young people recruitment by organized crime and jihadist networks operating in the Sahel-Saharan region.

This situation, warned the Czech MEP, aggravates the instability of this strategic region for the EU, wondering how the EU could welcome the leaders of the separatist group, supported and armed by Algeria, some of whom, in addition to the embezzlement of European funds, are prosecuted in an EU Member State for heinous crimes such as rape, kidnapping, torture, execution and impersonation.

 

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