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Is the UAE a threat to the countries of the Arab Maghreb Union?

Moncef Marzouki, the former Tunisian president, accused the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Egypt of leading a counter-revolution targeting Algeria, Tunisia and Morocco.





Marzouki added, during his speech on the works of the 11th session of the Maghreb Forum in El Jadida (central Morocco), that the counter-revolution did not forgive Moroccan King Mohammed VI in response to the pulse of the street in 2011, and his involvement of Islamists in power.

He pointed out that "these steps taken by the Moroccan monarch with respect to the countries of the counter-revolution are clear and must be revenge."

He pointed out that "the countries of the Maghreb Union are threatened, and what is taking place in Libya is a direct threat to Tunisia, Algeria and Morocco," adding: "We are in urgent need to revive the Maghreb Union."

And the relations between the UAE and the Kingdom of Morocco are deteriorating in the bad relations, especially in 2019, amid repeated accusations from Rabat to Abu Dhabi of playing a sabotage role in the Kingdom.

Perhaps the UAE's attempts to abort the "Skhirat" agreement, in which Morocco sought to support the stability of Libya on the basis that it would remain part of the large Maghreb entity, and support Haftar and destabilize the independence of Moroccan foreign policy, among the most prominent disagreements ongoing with Abu Dhabi.

No summit has been held at the level of the leaders of the Arab Maghreb Union (comprising five countries: Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya and Mauritania) since 1994 in Tunisia, and the presidential summit that was scheduled in Algeria in 2003 was postponed.

On June 10, 1988, the leaders of the Arab Maghreb countries met in the city of Zeralda in Algeria, to announce on February 17, 1989, the official establishment of the "Arab Maghreb Union" in the city of Marrakech, forming Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya and Mauritania.

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