Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2002-06-11-Speech-2-127"

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"en.20020611.7.2-127"2
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". Europe has often interfered with North West Africa in a negative way. Up until 50 years or so ago, those countries formed the colonial property of France, Spain and Italy, and particularly in Algeria, independence was preceded by a lengthy and devastating war. This past has contributed to the fact that violence and poverty in those countries still play an important role. In Tunisia, an authoritarian state emerges without any right to opposition; in Algeria, the army plays an important role and the large Berber population feel like second-rate citizens; in Morocco, the situation is politically speaking slightly better but many try to join their families who have been in the EU for a long time, and in the Western Sahara, the agreed referendum on independence has still not been held. Much like the USA is separated from a much poorer Mexico by the Rio Grande and a fence, Europe is kept separate from northern Africa by the Mediterranean. Many inhabitants of the Maghreb countries look for Europe’s higher standard of living or have reason to flee an oppressive regime. I concur with the view of the Green-Conservative coalition of rapporteurs that it would be preferable to make an economic migration superfluous by providing incomes and employment in their own countries, but that need not lead to support for the leaders of a unified Maghreb."@en1

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