Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Cooperation of Morocco

10/31/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 10/31/2024 18:08

Statement: Morocco Welcomes UN Security Council’s Adoption of Resolution 2756

Thursday 31 October 2024
The Kingdom of Morocco welcomes the adoption, on Thursday, of the resolution 2756 of the UN Security Council, extending MINURSO's mandate until October 31, 2025.

This resolution comes in a context marked by the irreversible trajectory set by His Majesty King Mohammed VI, may God assist Him, on the issue of the Kingdom's territorial integrity, through the growing support of permanent members of the Security Council and influential countries for Morocco's sovereignty over the Sahara and the Moroccan Autonomy Initiative, and the continued withdrawal of recognition of the pseudo "sadr,".

The resolution, adopted today, preserves all Morocco's achievements, while introducing new important elements for the issue's future development within the UN.

In fact, the new text enshrines the framework, the parties and the aim of the political process. As such, the Council re-established that roundtable talks are the only framework for a political solution to the regional conflict over the Moroccan Sahara.

Moreover, the resolution clearly identifies the parties to the dispute, notably Algeria, which is mentioned in the resolution as many times as Morocco. Similarly, the Security Council reaffirms that the political solution can only be realistic, pragmatic, lasting and based on compromise, cardinal elements of the Moroccan Autonomy Initiative, whose pre-eminence has been reaffirmed.

The resolution 2756 also enshrines two important developments that bolster the Kingdom's position:

In the first addition, the Council "welcomed the recent momentum and urged for building on it."

As a result, the Council endorses the international momentum on the Moroccan Sahara issue under the impetus of His Majesty the King, Mohammed VI, may God assist Him, in favor of Morocco's sovereignty over the Sahara and the Moroccan Autonomy Initiative, noting that from now on, UN action can only be part of this momentum.

In the second addition, the Security Council calls the other parties "to avoid acts which could compromise the political process," noting that the Council thus echoes the Kingdom's clear official position, stressing that there can be no political process without respect for the ceasefire.

The resolution was adopted by 12 votes in favor, 2 abstentions and the non-participation of the neighboring country, a non-permanent member of the Security Council. This non-participation demonstrates the isolation of this country's position within the Security Council and the international community in general. It also blatantly reveals its contradictions: it claims to defend international legality, Security Council resolutions and UN efforts, while refusing to support these same efforts and clinging to an obstructionist logic.

As His Majesty King Mohammed VI, may God assist Him, reaffirmed in His Speech on the opening session of the Parliament on October 11: "This recognition also supports the efforts exerted at the United Nations level to lay the groundwork for a political process that would lead to a final settlement of this issue within the framework of Moroccan sovereignty".