Text Version
RSS Feeds
Newsletter
Home Forum Photos Features Newsletter Archive Employment
About US Help Site Map
SEARCH   About US FAQ Site Map Site News
  SERVICES
  -Text Version
  -RSS Feeds
  -Newsletter
  -News Archive
  -Give us feedback
  -Voices of Readers
  -Online community
  -China Biz info
  What's new
 -
 -
Morocco to attend a meeting on Western Sahara issue in Austria
+ -
15:37, August 09, 2009

Click the "PLAY" button and listen. Do you like the online audio service here?
Good, I like it
Just so so
I don't like it
No interest
 Related News
 Moroccan FM praises China's African policy
 Peru seeks FTAs with Russia, India, Morocco, South Africa
 Morocco arrests brother of top Islamist group figure
 U.S. grants Morocco $280 thousand to develop port traffic
 Morocco stampede kills 11, wounds 30
 Comment  Tell A Friend
 Print Format  Save Article
Morocco will take part in a limited-person meeting in Austria on Aug. 9 to 11, at the invitation of UN Secretary General's Special Envoy Christopher Ross, to seek a permanent solution to the issue of Western Sahara, state MAP news agency quoted Moroccan Foreign Ministry as saying.

The informal meeting is to be held in preparations for the fifth round of talks between the regional parties directly related to the situation.

Delegates from Morocco, Algeria, Mauritania and the Polisario (formally known as the Popular Front for the Liberation of Saguia el Hamra and Rio de Oro) will attend the three-day meeting.

The meeting comes at the time when a delegation of staffers from the U.S. congress is visiting Morocco's southern province of Sahara.

Members of the delegation had the chance to interact with the local elected public servants and members of the civil community as well as to inspect development projects in the region, state MAP news agency reported.

Morocco annexed most of the Western Sahara area in the 1970s when Spain ended its colonial administration. It proposed that the region has a measure of autonomy under Moroccan sovereignty.

But the Polisario has insisted that the people of the region are allowed to vote on a referendum that would include the option of independence.

The UN Mission for the Referendum in Western Sahara (MINURSO) was established in 1991 through UN Security Council Resolution 690to monitor the cease-fire agreement between the two parties to the conflict over the Western Sahara -- the government of Morocco and Polisario. The UN classifies Western Sahara as a "non-self-governing territory." 

Source: Xinhua



  Your Message:   Most Commented:
80 pct of netizens agree China should punish Facebook
LA police: Michael Jackson death may have been 'homicide'
Chinese netizens call for punishing Turkey
Al-Qaida threatens Chinese abroad
Public angered by Turkish PM's 'genocide' accusation

|About Peopledaily.com.cn | Advertise on site | Contact us | Site map | Job offer|
Copyright by People's Daily Online, All Rights Reserved

http://english.people.com.cn/90001/90777/90853/6722638.pdf