Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2000-11-14-Speech-2-198"
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"en.20001114.8.2-198"2
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"At the end of the meeting held in Berlin on 28 September 2000, as you will be aware, the Minister for Foreign Affairs of Morocco made a speech in which he reasserted his willingness to do everything possible in order to find a sustainable and definitive solution. Mr Rabat now seems to have realised that this proposal did not meet either the UN Secretary-General or his Special Envoy’s expectations, and that it should have formed the basis for seeking a just and definitive solution to the problem.
As a result, Morocco dispatched its Minister for Foreign Affairs and Cooperation to New York on 26 October to attend a private meeting with the Security Council after a similar meeting was held with the Secretary-General of the Polisario Front on 19 October. During his speech, Mr Ben Aïssa stated that a complete file on the scope and content of Morocco’s proposal would be presented the next time the parties met under the auspices of Mr Baker. According to Mr Ben Aïssa, all Morocco had done at the meeting in Berlin was to put forward a proposal for dialogue and sketched an outline of what its content should be.
France is of the opinion that the willingness Morocco demonstrated in Berlin constitutes an initial step towards finding a way out of the current deadlock the settlement process has reached, and it must be considered as the basis for finding a solution. However, more details need to be provided and the substance of its content improved if it is to constitute a genuine political offer that can be considered by all of the parties involved. This is the message we have given our counterparts in Morocco."@en1
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