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Official statement on Morrocan Leila islet (that rocky island thingy)
Arabic News ^ | July 16 2002

Posted on 07/16/2002 12:44:00 PM PDT by knighthawk

Moroccan minister of foreign affairs and cooperation, Mohamed Benaissa, who held this Monday a press conference on the case of the Moroccan Mediterranean Islet of Leila read out the following statement:

"The Islet of Leila has always been part and parcel of the Moroccan territory. History is indeed full of facts evincing that the Islet is Moroccan territory. After the signing of the Moroccan-Spanish peace treaty of 1860 (which does not mention at all the islet of Leila), there were some Spanish incursions in the islet that were counteracted by Sultan Hassan 1st, as testified in the letters sent by the Sultan Hassan 1st to the Pacha of Tangiers on 26/11/1887, 28/09/1888 and 25/11/1892.

The territory was liberated in 1956, at the end of the Spanish protectorate over Morocco's northern area. Since then, Moroccan security forces have been present there until 1970. Starting from this date, they were deployed there, every time it was necessary, according to the security requirements in the region.

The islet is located at the feet of the Moussa mountain, 150 meters away from Moroccan land, 4 km to the west of Sebta and 40 km east of Tangiers. It extends over 13.5 hectares and is 300 m long. It is a barren and uninhabited rock used exclusively for goat breeding by the Moroccan population of the Moussa mountain.

The islet is included in the Moroccan territorial waters, as they were delimited by the decree 275 311 dated 21/7/1975 determining the geographic coordinates delimiting Morocco's territorial waters.

The Spanish land survey register has also delimited by ministerial decree, published in the official gazette, the Spanish protectorate zone in Morocco on 24/01/1949, a bordering area extending between Sebta and the rest of the Moroccan territory. This area called, Sebta natural zone (Zona natural de Sebta), does not mention the islet.

Furthermore, the Spanish decree N. 267/1976 dated 5/03/1976 on the delimitation of Spanish maritime spaces in the Mediterranean does not make any reference to the Islet as Spanish territory.

Even more, when the Spanish had projected in 1986 to include the land of Leila within the municipal territory of Sebta, Morocco had officially reacted with Spanish authorities with a verbal note in January 1987 and the mention has been since then abandoned.

It should be recalled that the two countries' legal instruments on the delimitation of their respective maritime space have been duly registered at the United Nations secretariat general and have therefore been notified to all the member-states of the organization.

Therefore, the Leila islet is not part of the pending dispute between Morocco and Spain over the two Moroccan northern enclaves which are still under Spanish occupation. The presence of a reduced number of Moroccan security agents in the islet does not constitute in any way a modification of the said dispute data.

Surveillance measures undertaken on July 11, 2002 in the Leila Islet are part of the exercise of the Moroccan state sovereignty on its national territory. They are part of the fight waged by Moroccan authorities throughout the Moroccan territory in general and in the Gibraltar strait in particular against drug trafficking, illegal immigration and other lawless activities.

Therefore, there are no other interpretation than the simple surveillance operation in a sensitive area where common interest commands increased vigilance, particularly in the present circumstances.

The Kingdom of Morocco remains resolutely attached to the fundamental principles of international legality and particularly the defense of territorial integrity of all countries.

Our country equally renews its deep attachment to the provisions of the Moroccan-Spanish joint declaration of April 7, 1956 and to the 1991 friendship, neighborliness and cooperation treaty.

The Moroccan government continues to wish that Moroccan-Spanish relations be based on sound and constructive foundations and on mutual respect and remains convinced that a frank, open and serene dialogue is still the best means to build together the future of these relations."

El Pais: Morocco wants to use Leila Island to fight terrorism
Arabic News July 15 2002

Moroccan minister of culture and communication called Spain not to exaggerate Morocco's setting of a surveillance post in the tiny island of Leila, stressing that Morocco wanted to use differently the island, which is part of its territory, in the fight against illegal migration and terrorism.

The official told Spanish wide-circulation daily "El Pais" that Morocco is not occupying this island, a 13.5 Hectares wide-land located less than 200 meters from the Moroccan Mediterranean coast at 40 KM east of Tangiers, because it is already part of its territory and does not belong to Spain. He further explained that at the end of the protectorate in 1956, the Island became Moroccan, as it is also evinced by the permanent presence of Moroccan civilians and authority over the last 45 years.

After he voiced astonishment at the Spanish government's response which he called "disproportionate," he said the Moroccan initiative was meant to improve the fight against the flows of illegal migration and activities of international terrorism, causes that are common not only to Morocco and Spain, but also to Europe.

The Minister who further called for the departure of the Spanish patrol boats anchoring in the region, said Morocco is shouldering its national and international responsibilities in matters of illegal migration control and insisted that setting a surveillance post in the island of Leila is not an act against Spain "a friend of Morocco."

Meanwhile, he further said, unlike the Leila Island, the Chaafarine Islands case is an anachronistic remnant of the colonial period and Morocco is claiming these islands together with the cities of Sebta and Melilia.

Regarding Moroccan-Spanish tense relations, he said it is useless to pretend that there are no problems. On the contrary, he argued, we should sit, the soonest, at a negotiating table to address each of the problems and discuss them thoroughly and frankly.

A top ranking-official at the Moroccan ministry of foreign affairs and cooperation announced on Thursday that Morocco has set a surveillance post on the Mediterranean tiny island of Leila, as part of the fight against terrorism and illegal immigration, particularly in the Gibraltar strait.

The source explained that the tiny island is uninhabited and that the only activity conducted there is the breeding of goat by Moroccans living in Jbel Moussa.

The official went on that the island was liberated in 1956 at the end of the Spanish protectorate over Morocco's northern area and since then Moroccan security forces were deployed there, whenever necessary.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: island; islet; leila; morocco; spain

1 posted on 07/16/2002 12:44:00 PM PDT by knighthawk
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To: MizSterious; rebdov; Nix 2; green lantern; BeOSUser; Brad's Gramma; dreadme; keri; Turk2; ...
Ping
2 posted on 07/16/2002 12:44:32 PM PDT by knighthawk
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To: knighthawk
This is the same situation as some of the Taiwanese islands directly off the coast of China.
3 posted on 07/16/2002 12:46:39 PM PDT by RightWhale
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