Morocco said on
Thursday it was considering a boycott of Swedish companies operating in
the North African kingdom because of Sweden's position on the conflict
over Western Sahara.The territory has been disputed since a war two decades ago.
The
government said Sweden has been campaigning to boycott products from
Western Sahara and international companies with a presence there.
"We
are heading toward a boycott of Swedish companies according the
principle of reciprocity after similar campaigns to boycott Moroccan
companies," the statement issued after the weekly cabinet meeting said. Morocco
has controlled most of Western Sahara since 1975 and claims the
sparsely populated stretch of desert, which has offshore fishing,
phosphate reserves and oilfield potential, as its own.
However, the
Algeria-backed Polisario Front seeks independence, and a United Nations
mission was formed more than 20 years ago anticipating a referendum,
which has never taken place, on Western Sahara's political future.
Sweden
and other Scandinavian countries have backed Western Saharan
self-determination, while France and Spain have been accused by
activists and human rights organizations of supporting the Moroccan
line.
Swedish Minister for Foreign
Affairs Margot Wallstrom said in a statement Sweden's entire policy on
Western Sahara is the subject of an internal review.
"The government
does not want to preempt this examination. Therefore, the issue of
recognition is currently not on the table," the statement said.
A spokesman for the ministry also said that Sweden has no boycott against exports from Morocco.
The
Moroccan government did not give details on how the boycott would be
implemented or say whether it knew which Swedish companies could be
affected.
"We are considering
it, but we hope Sweden would review its position on the Moroccan
Sahara," Mustapha Khalfi, communication minister and government
spokesman, told Reuters. "That's all I can tell you right now."
However, Moroccan authorities have already blocked the opening of IKEA's first store this week, citing a lack of permits.
Swedish-labeled
companies have been operating in Morocco for decades, including
Geely-owned carmaker Volvo Car Group, H & M Hennes & Mauritz AB
and Volkswagen-owned Scania.
Sourced from reuters.com
No comments:
Post a Comment