1. Enduring links with Europe
1.1. A long shared history
1. The Maghreb designates a group
of three countries, Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia, also called the
“little” or “central” Maghreb as opposed to the Greater Maghreb
which comprises the three aforementioned countries plus Mauritania
and Libya, and to the Mashrek which designates the Levant, a region
lying between Egypt and Iraq. In Arabic, Maghreb means “West”.
2. The Maghreb has a long shared history with the continent of
Europe. From ancient times, the Mediterranean Sea, Mare Nostrum, was a sea within a
world stretching from the borders of Scotland to Nubia. Carthage
then traded with Rome, before they fought. Under the Roman Empire,
the Maghreb countries became Roman provinces that went by the names
of Numidia (Algeria), Mauritania (Morocco) and Africa (Tunisia and
Libya). They formed parts of a whole which also included Gaul, Armenia,
Macedonia and Dacia.
3. The Islamisation of this part of the world between the 7th
and 8th centuries did not greatly alter relations with Europe, which
remained very strong and were marked by well-developed trade links,
particularly with the Italian city-states (Pisa, Genoa, Venice)
or marred by savage warfare (Normans, Reconquista)
as well as propagating the wisdom of the Ancient Greeks. Spain was
then the emblematic scene of the encounter between the Maghreb,
converted to Islam, and Christian Europe, from the battle of Las
Navas de Tolosa (1212) to the philosophy of Averroës.
4. From the 19th century onwards, the history of relations between
Europe and the Maghreb were those of colonisation. The Maghreb,
the cradle of glorious civilisations, was relegated to the position
of protectorates (run by France and Spain in Morocco from 1912 to
1956 and by France in Tunisia from 1881 to 1956) and colonies (Algeria,
1830), mainly under the sway of France. Their populations were considered
inferior, and suffered much humiliation and exploitation. At the
same time a network of services such as schools and hospitals and
infrastructure such as roads, ports and airports was set up, primarily
to serve people from mainland France. Although a shared but imposed
language – namely French – created a link between the people, and
although Muslims, Jews and Christians cohabited without clashing,
colonisation is still a dark chapter in the history and the relations
of these countries and their enslaved people. Independence was declared
by Morocco and Tunisia in 1956 and in Algeria only in 1962 after
a six-year “war” with France (from 1956 to 1962), known as the war
of “pacification”, which ended with the Evian Agreements of 5 July
1962.
5. The links between the Council of Europe and the Maghreb have
kept alive this shared history. As the Political Affairs Committee’s
Rapporteur on the External Relations of the Council of Europe recalled
in June 2006: “from a cultural, historical, and economical point
of view, they form the nearest neighbourhood to Europe. Even though
this sub-group itself is far from being homogenous, almost all of
these states claim a special relationship with Europe and a good
number declare readiness to align themselves with European political traditions,
while some have started reforms going in this direction … This should
be considered as a challenge and also as an opportunity for the
Council of Europe, whose expertise in this field is widely recognised
by the EU as a reference. I believe that the Council of Europe should
seriously engage in promoting its values and offering its democratic
know-how to Mediterranean countries, by way of partnership and not
of competition.”
1.2. Presentation of the three
Maghreb countries
6. Algeria is the biggest of the
three Maghreb countries with an area of 2 381 741 square kilometres
and population of 33 million. After colonisation by France in 1830
and the war with it between 1956 and 1962, it has been independent
since the Evian Agreements signed with France on 5 July 1962. The
People’s Democratic Republic of Algeria is under a presidential
regime. For a long time, power was exercised exclusively by a single party,
the FLN (National Liberation Front), under President Ahmed Ben Bella
(1962-65) then by the army, in the person of the former Minister
of Defence, Houari Boumédienne (1965-78). Under President Chadli Bendjedid
(1979-92), the country suffered a major economic crisis, which rapidly
turned into a political crisis with the rise of the Islamist movement,
the FIS (Islamic Salvation Front). The FIS’s victory in the legislative elections
of 1991, the cancellation of the results of these elections and
the assassination of President Boudiaf in June 1992 threw Algeria
into chaos. The army and the government found themselves fighting
a range of Islamist armed groups including the GIA (Armed Islamic
Group), which carried out numerous massacres. The election as president
of General and former Minister of Defence Liamine Zeroual, in 1994,
marked a new stage in the fight against the Islamists. The “decade
of blood” that claimed over 100 000 lives ended in 1999 with the election
as president of Abdelaziz Bouteflika, who began a process of reconciliation.
7. Blessed with rich deposits of gas (the world’s fifth largest
producer), oil (an OPEP member, producing 1.4 million barrels a
day, worth over US$50 billion), iron, gold, zinc and uranium, Algeria
is one of the richest countries on the African continent in terms
of GDP (US$60 billion), and healthy economic growth (4.8% not including
petroleum products) has enabled it to pay back its rescheduled debt
ahead of time. The unemployment rate of 15.7% nevertheless remains
comparatively high, affecting women and young people in particular.
A form of acute social deprivation seems to exist and endure somewhat
unaccountably. Where does the country’s wealth all go? And why is
there so little investment?
8. Islam is the state religion (under Article 2 of the constitution).
The population is 99% Sunni, but the state guarantees freedom of
worship for all. Finally, the Algerian Government has long pursued
an extensive Arabisation movement especially in the linguistic sphere,
to the detriment of French and of regional languages such as the
Berber languages (Kabyle among them) or Darija (Algerian Arabic).
The most obvious sign of this cultural effervescence is that in
2007 Algiers was designated the cultural capital of the Arab world.
9. Morocco covers an area of 710 850 square kilometres
and
has over 30 million inhabitants. It was a French protectorate between
1912 and 1956, when it became independent and Mohammed V came to
the throne. In 1961 Hassan II succeeded his father and went on to
reign over the Sharifi kingdom for thirty-eight years. His reign
was marked by the strengthening of Morocco’s territorial integrity
and the violent repression of various opponents during what are
now commonly referred to as Morocco’s “Years of Lead”. In the early
1990s, the Moroccan monarchy began to adopt a more liberal stance
and made certain constitutional reforms. Since 1999, the country
has been ruled by Mohammed VI.
10. Morocco is the only Maghreb country to be a constitutional
monarchy. Its ruler Mohammed VI, “Amir alMu’minin” (Commander of
the Faithful), is directly descended from the Prophet Mahomet. The
country’s economy relies on tourism, NICT and telecommunications,
which are its mainstays (GNP of US$39 billion), and Morocco has
the lowest unemployment rate of the three countries (7.7%).
11. Strongly involved in poverty alleviation, Morocco has devoted
numerous efforts to employment, economic development, education,
housing, the Family Code and government reform. But its priorities
of course continue to lie in combating terrorism and illegal immigration.
Sunni Islam is the state religion but religious pluralism still
exists in Morocco, which has the largest Jewish community of any
Arab country.
12. Tunisia is the eastern most country of the Maghreb and also
the smallest (163 610 square kilometres for over 10 million inhabitants).
Having been a French protectorate since 1881, it became independent
(like Morocco) in 1956. The Tunisian Republic is a presidential
regime, which was run from 1957 onwards by Habib Bourguiba, who
had led the struggle for independence. As president, he endeavoured
to modernise Tunisia, concentrating on education, secularism and
equality between women and men. From the early 1980s onwards his
declining state of health, his nepotism and the increasing cost
of essential commodities led to a number of revolts and rising Islamism.
As a result of this crisis, Habib Bourguiba was eventually deposed
in 1987 by his prime minister, Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali, who became
president.
13. Economically, the country is quite close to European countries
with a diversified market economy (GNP of US$22 billion). Unemployment,
however, is fairly high (14%). The middle classes account for over
70% of the population and hold the country together economically
and politically. Finally, it should be noted that Tunisia is the
first Mediterranean country to have concluded a free trade agreement
with the European Union (17 July 1995), which came into force on
1 March 1998.
14. Tunisian society is a leader in the Arab world. Although it
has a 99% Muslim (Sunni) population, different religions have always
coexisted peacefully in this country which, in Djerba especially,
has a large Jewish community. The status of women is fully respected
and their integration into the various realms of society is the pride
of the country. Linguistically uniform, Tunisia has devoted the
lion’s share of its budget to education. Some 99% of six year olds
are at school and the country has developed programmes to teach
French and English from the earliest age. The large student population
(at just under 300 000) does, however, pose the problem of mass
entry to the employment market.
1.3. The current political situation
15. In Algeria, President Bouteflika
was re-elected for a second five-year term in 2004 with 83% of votes. Since
24 May 2006 the government leader has been Abdelaziz Belkhadem,
former foreign affairs minister and former Secretary General of
the FLN (National Liberation Front), the main party in the National
People’s Assembly.
16. The general elections on 18 May 2007 were won by the Presidential
Alliance (249 out of 389 seats) made up of the country’s three principal
parties: the National Liberation Front (FLN, nationalist) with 136
seats, the National Rally for Democracy (RND, liberal) with 61 seats
and the Movement for the Society of Peace (MSP, Islamist) with 52
seats, but featured a high level of abstention (36% turnout). Meanwhile
Algeria, which believed itself rid of terrorism, was struck by several
attacks blamed on groups close to al-Qaeda. The attacks were aimed
at the centres of power – the government building in Algiers (11
April 2007, 33 dead), President Bouteflika at Batna (6 September
2007, 22 dead) and the armed forces at Lakhdaria (11 July 2007,
10 dead) and Dellys (8 September, 30 dead). At Algiers and other
cities in the country on Sunday 9 September 2007, tens of thousands
marched in protest at the upsurge of violence.
17. In Morocco, King Mohammed VI in the last few years has initiated
reform programmes in the areas of democracy and human rights (adoption
of a new Family Code, proceedings of the Equity and Reconciliation Commission
on the crimes committed during the “Years of Lead” under Hassan
II in particular). In November 2006, Morocco, which continues to
co-operate with the United Nations over the Western Sahara, expressed approval
of the territory’s eventual autonomy.
18. The general elections on 7 September 2007 were marked by very
low turnout (37%) and the victory of one of the five parties in
power, Istiqlal, with 52 seats. The PJD (Justice and Development
Party), an Islamic party which had been the overwhelming favourite,
came second with 46 seats and has questioned the transparency of
the elections. The new government led by Abbas El Fassi, appointed
on 19 September 2007, will have to tackle the social problems and
continue the fight against terrorism, which remains the authorities’ main
anxiety. After the Casablanca bombings on 16 May 2003 (33 dead),
Morocco committed enormous resources to forestall further attacks.
19. In Tunisia, President Ben Ali, who succeeded Habib Bourguiba
(1957-87) in 1987, was comfortably re-elected in 2004 after amending
the constitution, which had restricted to three the number of presidential
terms but now sets only an age limit of 75, and he now governs with
the help of Mohammed Ghannouchi, who has been prime minister since
1999. Despite a law guaranteeing political representation of the
opposition in the Chamber of Deputies, legislative and executive
powers remain essentially in the hands of the president. On 7 November
2007, the president, who is 71, celebrated twenty years in power
and it is now looking increasingly likely that he will be re-elected
in 2009. Lastly, Tunisia also had to contend with the fundamentalist
threat when Islamic extremists staged a revolt south of Tunis in
January 2007 but were neutralised by the armed forces.
2. Social problems and human
rights
2.1. Immigration and human trafficking
20. Immigration is one of the chief
concerns of the 21st century. Its management affects all continents
and all societies. The Maghreb countries are particularly affected
by migration flows. For a long time, European countries have sought
part of their labour force in the Maghreb. Today, there are some
1.5 million immigrants from these countries in France, about 600
000 in Spain and over 300 000 in Italy.
21. While Europe tends to see the Maghreb as a source of migration
flows, it ought not to forget that the Maghreb represents a zone
of intense intra-African immigration in the building and civil engineering
sectors and in industry. Tunisia and Morocco encounter the same
problems relating to immigration from Sub-Saharan Africa as do the
European countries on the Mediterranean coast. It should also be
noted that all three countries, but Algeria in particular, have
a high number of skilled Chinese immigrants.
22. The tragic events in the Spanish enclaves of Morocco (Ceuta
and Melilla) and the various shipwrecks of vessels sailing from
the coasts of the Maghreb have highlighted the serious problem of
immigration from the African countries to Europe. On 10 and 11 July
2006 a conference on migration and development was held in Rabat,
attended by 57 states including 30 European countries, to discuss
this sensitive issue. The conference ended in the adoption of an
action plan providing for intensification of co-operation between
the two sides of the Mediterranean on management of migration, prevention
of illegal immigration, intended prioritisation of codevelopment
and training. The ministers for foreign affairs of the various states
moreover proclaimed in their final political declaration, “We commit
ourselves to encourage and deepen the political and operational dialogue
between the European Union and Africa on migration and development”.
23. In their political declaration the ministers for foreign affairs
also reaffirmed their resolve to combat trafficking in human beings,
exclusion and racism, and undertook to foster peace and stability,
movement of workers and persons generally, and a better migrant
integration policy, all of which are themes propounded by the Council
of Europe and its Parliamentary Assembly. The latter has furthermore
restated this concern on numerous occasions, notably in 2006 when
it proclaimed that “On the basis of the principles contained in
the international human rights instruments relevant to irregular
migrants, the Assembly invites the governments of member states
of the Council of Europe to guarantee the minimum civil and political
and social and economic rights outlined in this resolution.”
2.2. Corruption
24. Corruption is particularly
widespread in the three Maghreb countries. According to the 2006
Corruption Perceptions Index, at world level Tunisia ranks 51st,
Morocco 79th and Algeria 84th.
It
is a problem everywhere, both in the public service sector and in
all the sectors of the business world.
2.3. Terrorism
25. Just like the European countries,
very hard hit in recent years, in London, Madrid and Istanbul, the countries
of the Maghreb have paid dearly in their struggle against terrorism.
To varying degrees but always with bloodshed, the Maghreb has been
struck by terrorism. In Djerba (Tunisia) on 11 April 2002, the explosion of
a tanker truck in front of a synagogue caused the deaths of 21 people,
including several European tourists. In Morocco, after the outrages
perpetrated in Casablanca on 16 May 2003 by a Salafia Jihadia group
killing 33, the terrorist menace still remains at a high level,
as evidenced by the police operations carried out in Casablanca
on 10 April 2007, leading to the suicide of the kamikazes and to
the abortive attack in Meknès on 13 August 2007. Algeria already
bore the full brunt of Islamic terrorism between 1989 and 1999,
when hardly a day passed without another massacre targeting the
civilian population, but neither has it been spared the new wave
of terrorism following on from 11 September 2001. On 11 April 2007
two car bomb attacks, one of them near the government building in
Algiers, killed 33 people, on 6 September an attack aimed at the
president killed another 22 and on 11 July a bomb attack on the
Lakhdaria barracks killed 10 soldiers. Lastly, on 20 September,
the number two of al-Qaeda, Ayman al-Zawahiri, called on Muslims
to “cleanse” the Maghreb of the French and Spanish. His appeal was
followed, on 21 September, by a suicide bomb attack east of Algiers that
injured nine, including two French people and an Italian.
26. Confronted like many Council of Europe member states by cells
with al-Qaeda affinities or affiliation, whether the Algerian GSPC
(Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat) which has become AQMI
(al-Qaeda in Islamic Maghreb) having claimed responsibility for
the Algiers bombings and suspected of plotting an attack on the
Strasbourg Christmas market, or the Moroccan Islamic Combatant Group
(GICM), the presumed culprit for the bombings in Casablanca in 2003
and Madrid in 2004, the Maghreb countries have intensified their
reaction to these threats. Thus they share the concerns of many
Council of Europe member countries. Accordingly, the Parliamentary
Assembly has reaffirmed its desire for closer co-operation on this
issue by stating: “The global nature of the terrorist threat makes
total cohesion and solidarity within the international community,
unwavering political determination and full and effective co-operation
between Council of Europe member states essential. The security
of Europeans in the face of terrorism is indivisible.”
27. The existence of and response to Islamic extremism are taboo
subjects in official pronouncements. The people we talked to in
both Algeria and Tunisia were adamant that the threat had come from
outside (Saudi Arabia and Libya), was not latent in their own societies
and had been eradicated. However, the persistent social deprivation
in Algerian society and Tunisians’ involvement in a large number
of bomb attacks (in Madrid on 11 March 2004, for example) and in
terrorist organisations such as Fatah al-Islam would suggest the
contrary.
2.4. Human rights and public
freedoms
28. There are other concerns shared
by the Maghreb countries and the Council of Europe member states, particularly
over problems common to all of the countries of the Mediterranean
Basin (political reform, intercultural and interfaith dialogue,
etc.). Thus the Mediterranean Sea has never ceased to be a European
sea. Environment, economic and agricultural policy, intercultural
and interfaith dialogue, the place of women in society, peace and
democratic stability are all matters of common interest to the Maghreb
and the Council of Europe member states. In the past Algerian, Moroccan
and Tunisian parliamentarians were often invited to meetings organised
by the Parliamentary Assembly on these specific issues. There is
a need to establish new relations and intensify dialogue.
3. Offering the Maghreb countries
the Council of Europe’s support and the benefit of its experience
3.1. In the areas of democracy
and human rights
29. It should firstly be pointed
out that the deficiencies and breaches of democracy and human rights
are specific to each state while having common features as regards
political pluralism, independence of justice, freedom of the press
and fighting corruption, for example. The Council of Europe’s experience
would enable it both to raise its profile in this part of the Mediterranean
region and above all to fulfil to perfection its mission of promoting
democracy and human rights as universal values.
3.1.1. Democracy and rule of law
30. The situation regarding democracy
and rule of law is still characterised by many problems in the Maghreb.
Political pluralism varies according to countries. It is virtually
non-existent in Tunisia despite a semblance of constitutional guarantees
(a law assigns a minimum of 20% of seats to the opposition in the Chamber
of Deputies), and power belongs to the president who, by abolishing
the restriction on the number of his terms, has paved the way for
life presidency. The president’s party, the RCD (Constitutional
Democratic Union), has 2.3 million activists, according to the leadership’s
figures, out of a total population of just under 10 million. Another
indication of underdeveloped political pluralism was the recent
hunger strike, in protest at the decision not to renew the lease
on the offices of her party and its newspaper, by the Secretary
General of the PDP (Democratic Progressive Party), Ms Maya Jribi,
whom I met at her home. In Morocco and Algeria political pluralism
remains tentative. It is claimed that there is a multiparty system
but power still lies in the hands of the ruling coalitions (namely
the FLN or RND in Algeria and the Istiqlal or USFP in Morocco).
31. In none of the three countries is the judiciary independent.
Very often the rights of the defence are flouted (extraction of
admissions under torture, questioning of the accused without the
presence of counsel, medical examinations unknown, etc.). In Algeria,
as the leaders themselves admit, people are more concerned about social
justice than democratic freedoms. And this is supposed to be enough.
But extreme poverty prevails.
3.1.2. Human rights and fundamental
freedoms
32. Human rights and fundamental
freedoms are not adequately secured in the Maghreb countries and
have tended to deteriorate in recent years. In October 2005, seven
political figures from civil society went on a hunger strike in
Tunisia to protest against the repeated human rights violations.
Many opponents of the government, even moderate ones, are under
constant police surveillance, as also are human rights advocates.
33. Faced with terrorism, the Maghreb countries have adopted markedly
security-oriented policies to deal with these threats, often in
contempt of human rights. Torture, rights of the defence ignored,
arbitrary terms of detention and extradition without the consent
of the accused are the chief ills of these anti-terrorist measures. While
Morocco appears to have hosted secret CIA detention centres,
Amnesty
International has recorded multiple violations by the Algerian Department
of Intelligence and Security (DRS) or by the Tunisian authorities towards
citizens arrested on the nation’s soil or transferred from abroad
against their will.
These
ultra-security policies intended to combat terrorism have also been
used against any type of “enemy” (businessmen, political prisoners,
Western Saharan militants, etc.).
34. Freedom of expression, particularly freedom of the press and
the media, remains a disturbing problem in this part of the world.
In Algeria, the champions of human rights and their organisations
have to contend with legislation which either prevents their working
and keeping watch, or has them prosecuted for “breach of state security”.
For instance, in February 2006, the amnesty laws passed made it
a criminal offence to raise any criticism of the security forces
during the “decade of blood” (1992-2000). Interestingly, the army
keeps well out of sight. According to some commentators, however,
it is the real holder of power in Algeria. In Morocco, freedom of
association is tolerated but stringently controlled by the interior
ministry. In Tunisia, the situation is scarcely any better. Human
Rights Watch (HRW), in its last annual report, said: “Authorities
have refused legal recognition to every truly independent human
rights organisation that has applied over the past decade. They then
use the pretext of an organisation’s ‘illegal’ status to hamper
its activities”.
On
15 June 2006 the European Parliament moreover adopted a resolution
deploring the crackdown on human rights defenders in Tunisia. The fact
is – as the Tunisian political authorities themselves admit – that
democracy, as an issue, ranks after the economy, social issues,
education, religion and security.
35. As regards freedom of the press, Tunisia is the country with
the most restricted press in the Maghreb. Criticism of the regime
operated by President Ben Ali – around whom there is a genuine personality
cult – is disallowed on pain of prosecution. Despite the constitutional
guarantee of freedom of the press in Tunisia, it remains strictly
controlled by the political authorities. In Algeria, numerous journalists
have been prosecuted for defamation and despite the pardon granted
them in July 2006 by President Bouteflika, many of them are still
under threat of proceedings. In Morocco, interference with the freedom
of the press occurs but is more discreet. According to the Committee
for the Protection of Journalists (CPJ), in a report made public
on 3 July 2007 and entitled “a skin-deep Morocco”, this interference
is more by way of perverting justice against the media, or allocating
advertising contracts to media in the light of the criticisms made
by them. The Moroccan press, long recognised as one of the Arab
world’s most critical, has numerous encroachments on its freedom to
contend with. Criticism on certain subjects, such as the monarch’s
person, is banned and there are court proceedings against several
journalists, notably Ahmed Benchemsi, director of the magazine Tel Quel, for “disrespect to the
King’s person”. Moreover, the Moroccan El
Watan weekly’s journalist Mostapha Hurmatallah has been
sentenced to eight months’ imprisonment without remission for publishing
“official documents”.
3.2. Current reforms to be supported
36. The Maghreb countries have
begun to remedy these infringements of democracy and human rights. Morocco
and Algeria, and to a lesser extent Tunisia, have embarked on major
reforms to enter the arena of human rights and democracy. To continue
their progress on the path of respect for human rights, these countries
will most certainly need the support of the Council of Europe.
37. In many respects, the state of democracy and human rights
in the Maghreb is reminiscent of the situation in the 1990s in many
of the east European countries which have now joined our Organisation.
The three countries have long since decreed a moratorium on capital
punishment. Even though sentences have still been passed in recent
years, the latest executions date back to 1991 in Tunisia and 1993
in Morocco and Algeria. On 17 October 2006 Algeria even had before
the National People’s Assembly a law to abolish the death penalty,
but it was finally rejected. We should point out, with regret, that
Japan and the United States which have observer status to the Council
of Europe, continue to apply the death penalty, and that the Russian Federation,
a member of the Council of Europe, declared a moratorium in 1996
but has not yet proceeded with abolition. The strengthening of co-operation
between the Council of Europe and the Maghreb countries would definitely
bring them towards abolition.
38. Moreover, the three Maghreb countries (Tunisia, 1969; Morocco,
1979; Algeria, 1989) have ratified many international conventions
securing human rights, such as the International Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, the International
Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR) and the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR). Morocco
and Tunisia have set up official human rights protection agencies.
In Morocco, the Consultative Council for Human Rights (CCDH), created
in 1990 and reorganised in 2001, allows inquiry into cases of human
rights violations and review of the compliance of Moroccan legislation
with the international standards on human rights. However, it cannot
be petitioned by ordinary Moroccan citizens, unlike the Diwan al Madalim, a kind of ombudsman
interceding in disputes between the administration and the public
in the context of “primacy of law and equity”. In Tunisia in 2003
the Higher Committee for Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms was
set up to investigate the various breaches of human rights and especially
the situation in prisons. In 2001 Algeria set up a national advisory
committee on human rights protection and promotion. When I met its
chairperson, Farouk Ksentini, he said that a great deal had been
done and a great deal remained to be done in matters of democracy
and human rights. He thought that political stability could be achieved
only through democracy and human rights.
39. Algeria and Morocco have also looked into the injuries of
their respective pasts in an effort to set them at rest. The situation
here has similarities with certain Council of Europe member states,
in particular the Balkans. In so doing, the two Maghreb countries
wished to commence a process of national reconciliation. Algeria’s
President Bouteflika submitted a Charter for National Peace and
Reconciliation to the people at referendum. The charter approved
by the people on 29 September 2005, which came into force on 2 March 2006,
seeks the release of many prisoners not implicated in the rapes,
mass murders or bombings in public places, and compensation for
victims’ families. In Morocco, King Mohammed VI instituted the Equity
and Reconciliation Commission (IER) in January 2004 in order to
shed light on the “Years of Lead” in Morocco, coinciding with the
reign of Hassan II (1961-99) marked by serious violations of human
rights and persecution of political opponents. This body, which
published its report in November 2005, has acknowledged the repression
and heard many victims though without bringing any culprits to justice.
40. Regarding the problem of equality between women and men, Morocco
and Tunisia are working for greater gender equality. Tunisia remains
the Arab country where women are best integrated in society, thanks to
the 1957 Code of Personal Status. It was estimated in a report by
the Commission of the European Communities that in 2002 “women made
up more than a quarter of the active working population, and more than
5 000 women held leading positions in enterprises”.
Morocco
has also made progress on this issue. The kingdom adopted in 2004
a new Code of Personal Status
(Moudawana) reducing
many inequalities between women and men, particularly in matters
of marriage, divorce, property and inheritance.
41. Finally, the Maghreb countries are showing their determination
to forge ahead in pursuit of democracy and human rights in such
varied spheres as freedom of religion, which is recognised and honoured
in all three countries, and fighting against corruption. Despite
corruption classifications which are still inadequate, Tunisia (51st),
Morocco (79th) and Algeria (84th) are far ahead of certain Council
of Europe member states such as Serbia (90th), Armenia (93rd), Albania
(111th), the Russian Federation (121st) and Azerbaijan (130th).
3.3. Western Sahara, a conflict
in need of settlement
42. The Western Sahara question
remains a problem that has vitiated relations between Algeria and Morocco
for over thirty years, the border between the two countries having
remained closed for ten years. This non-autonomous territory of
almost 266 000 square kilometres is claimed simultaneously by Morocco
and the Polisario Front, a separatist movement supported by Algeria.
Once again, the concepts of territorial integrity and peoples’ right
of self-determination are invoked by the contenders. Official talks
resumed under the aegis of the United Nations between Morocco and
the Polisario Front in June 2007. Whereas Morocco wishes to hold a
referendum on possible autonomy for the territory, the Polisario
Front accepts the principle of a referendum on condition that it
concerns self-determination with a view to independence. For its
part, Tunisia is keen to maintain neutrality on the issue. The Western
Sahara thus continues to strain the two countries’ bilateral relations
and is hampering development of the Arab Maghreb Union (AMU). Neither
the King of Morocco, Mohammed VI, nor the President of the Algerian
Republic, Mr Bouteflika, has made an official journey to the neighbouring
country. In July 2006 on the occasion of the conference on migration
and development bringing together European and African countries,
Algeria boycotted the gathering after being accused by Morocco of laxity
with regard to immigration.
43. The experience of the Council of Europe and the Parliamentary
Assembly in some conflicts, for example the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict,
in harmony with the UN approach, would probably benefit the parties
involved in this conflict and would position the Council of Europe’s
role in a continent where it is little-known or absent. The Political
Affairs Committee’s rapporteur on this question already considered
in 2004 that “The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
has the experience to facilitate the resolution of this conflict. …
If the outcome of the referendum points towards independence, the
Council of Europe could help the new state to establish democratic
standards, especially through the signing of conventions open to
non-member states. If the referendum results in integration into
Morocco or autonomy, the Assembly has at its disposal the report
on the positive experiences of autonomous regions as a source of
inspiration for conflict resolution in Europe, which can provide
some useful avenues of approach for Morocco.”
4. Current different types
of co-operation
4.1. Co-operation with Europe
44. The European institutions and
the European Union especially were very quick to appreciate the necessity
of intensifying their collaboration with the Maghreb countries and
of bringing the southern shores of the Mediterranean into Europe’s
sphere of influence. The 3rd Summit of Heads of State and Government
of the Council of Europe (May 2005), and the numerous reports on
it by the Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly, have constantly
reiterated the need for this intensification.
4.1.1. Barcelona Process, Association
Agreement (AA), MEDA
45. Since the April 1976 co-operation
agreements between the EEC and Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia, relations
between the northern and southern shores of the Mediterranean have
steadily developed. The Maghreb is already co-operating with the
European Union in the framework of the Barcelona Process, initiated in
1995 and setting up a Euro-Mediterranean partnership between the
15 European Union countries and 12 countries of the region including
the three Maghreb countries. This partnership, intended to be a
middle way between accession and development assistance, has focused
on peace-building, establishing a free trade area over the long
term, and intercultural dialogue. Thus in 1998 (Tunisia), 2000 (Morocco)
and 2005 (Algeria), Association Agreements (AA) strengthening the
European Union’s economic ties with the Maghreb were signed. The
Maghreb has also joined the MEDA programme offering measures of
financial and technical backing to the reform of the economic and
social structures, and particularly enhancement of democratic stability.
The various people I talked to in Algeria and Tunisia deplored the
inertia of the Barcelona Process and expressed the view that the
EU’s eastward expansion had been done at their expense. And now,
they await concrete undertakings from the continent of Europe which
will bear of their new interest.
4.1.2. Euro-Mediterranean Parliamentary
Assembly (EMPA)
46. Within this Euro-Mediterranean
partnership, the three Maghreb countries have tried joint parliamentary co-operation.
Set up by the ministerial conference in Naples in December 2003,
this consultative body of Euro-Mediterranean partnership sees to
the monitoring of the association agreements, adopts resolutions,
and can make recommendations to the ministerial conference. It is
composed, in equal proportions, of representatives of parliaments
of the European Union and the Mediterranean countries. In 2005 the
first Euro-Mediterranean Parliamentary Assembly met, and was chaired
from March 2006 to March 2007 by Mr Fouad Mebazaa, President of
the Tunisian Parliament since 1997. Co-operation in the EMPA stands
as a fine example of success for a parliamentary partnership between
the EU (27 states) and the Maghreb, which could be followed by an
interparliamentary partnership with the Council of Europe (47 states).
4.1.3. European Neighbourhood Policy
(ENP)
47. In the EU framework, however,
the most emblematic initiative in this co-operation of course remains
the inclusion of Algeria, Tunisia and Morocco in the European Neighbourhood
Policy (ENP). The policy, launched in 2004, has set itself the objective
of averting the formation of further dividing lines between the
EU and its immediate neighbourhood. Accordingly, the European Union
has hastened to associate all its neighbours and especially the
Maghreb with this approach. The ENP does not foreshadow accession,
but endeavours to provide the EU’s neighbourhood with the means
of bolstering democratic stability, the market economy and security.
The EU adopted several action plans on that account with Tunisia
and Morocco in 2005, Algeria still being subject to a report. These
action plans feature the strengthening of co-operation in combating
terrorism and in social and transport policy, and furthering the
actions so far conducted in the fields of human rights and liberalisation
of trade.
48. The Council of Europe has defined its own role in the European
Neighbourhood Policy, particularly in relation to the Maghreb countries.
In the Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly’s report on this question,
it
is pointed out that “The Council of Europe could make an essential
contribution to the ENP’s objectives by developing special relations
with the Mediterranean countries – non-members of the Council of Europe
– which would allow the Organisation to fill the void in leading
the struggle to achieve democratic and economic reforms on the African
and Asian continents.” Thus, without causing overlap of responsibilities,
the Council of Europe would find scope here for strengthening its
co-operation with the Maghreb.
49. Lastly, the European Parliament maintains relations with the
Maghreb countries. Within its Committee on Foreign Affairs it has
a delegation for relations with the Maghreb countries. In addition,
the European Parliament co-operates with the Maghreb in the EU-ACP
(Africa, Caribbean, Pacific) Joint Parliamentary Assembly. The so-called
Luxembourg Agreement of 25 June 2005 enshrined this EU-ACP partnership.
So co-operation between the EU and the Maghreb is definitely a success.
Although the co-operation in this context is geared mainly to economic
issues, questions of rule of law and democracy are not forgotten,
but are not dealt with according to their real dimension. The Council
of Europe would therefore be well advised to involve itself to defend
its fundamental values while avoiding competition with the EU.
4.2. Co-operation with international
and European human rights institutions
50. The three Maghreb states are
recognised on the international scene as important partners. All
three have been repeatedly elected members (not permanent) of the
Security Council. Morocco (1992-93), Tunisia (2000-01) and Algeria
(2004-05) have shown their determination to perform a crucial role
in international relations.
4.2.1. UN Commission on Human Rights
51. The Maghreb, present in the
higher agencies of the United Nations, has also shown great diligence
in the UN bodies responsible for defending human rights. For instance,
the three countries have been actively involved of late in the Commission
on Human Rights. Morocco and Tunisia even sat on it together (1998-2000) before
being replaced by Algeria (2001-03).
4.2.2. UN Human Rights Council
52. The three Maghreb states followed
up their undertakings on human rights by joining upon its creation the
47 founding members of the Human Rights Council formed in 2006 for
a term of one year.
4.2.3. European Instrument for
Democracy and Human Rights (EIDHR)
53. The EIDHR was created in 1994
by the European Parliament to promote human rights, democracy and conflict
prevention in states through the agency of NGOs and international
organisations. Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia were each eligible in
2006 under the EIDHR projects on promoting both a culture of human
rights and a democratic process.
5. Co-operation with the Council
of Europe
5.1. First initiatives
54. The Council of Europe’s co-operation
with the Maghreb countries, reaffirmed at the 3rd Summit of Heads of
State and Government of the Council of Europe in Warsaw (2005),
is carried out by indirect means, particularly through consultative
bodies, discussion forums or joint programmes. That is why the present
report concentrates on advocating the enhancement of this co-operation
and institutionalises it, if it is requested.
55. On environmental, agricultural policy and water management
issues, the Maghreb countries are strongly present alongside the
Council of Europe member states. This collaboration was given tangible
form in the Euro-Mediterranean Conference on Agriculture, held in
Strasbourg on 28 and 29 September 2006.
56. In the education field, the Council of Europe and its Directorate
of Youth and Sport, co-operating with the European Commission, has
run human rights training courses with the Maghreb in the context
of the “Youth Partnership”; these were held in Fez, Morocco, from
13 to 22 May 2007.
57. On equal opportunities for women and men, the three countries
work with the relevant Assembly committee and in partnership with
the Council of Europe North-South Centre. This co-operation, aimed
at encouraging Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia to adopt measures fully
upholding gender equality, was realised for the first time in the
parliamentary seminar on respect for the principle of equality between
women and men in civil law, including family codes, in October 2006.
Some other joint programmes have been carried out on women immigrant’s
integration, equality in civil law, or on domestic violence against
women. This last issue gave rise to an important information and
awareness-raising campaign.
58. Finally, in the cultural sphere, the Council of Europe and
the Parliamentary Assembly have on several occasions involved themselves
in promoting intercultural and interfaith dialogue in the Mediterranean
basin as a whole. For example, a meeting on intercultural dialogue
and stereotypes disseminated by the media with regard to Euro-Mediterranean
relations will be held by the North-South Centre in Tunis in the
first half of 2008. Both the President of Algeria’s High Islamic
Council and Tunisia’s Grand Mufti have expressed support for greater
participation in interfaith dialogue so as to raise awareness of
Islam and its philosophy. Tunisia, leading the way in this, established
a university chair on the question in 2001, the Ben Ali Chair for
Inter-civilisation Dialogue. There have also been various cultural
projects to teach the younger generations about national heritage.
59. In the area of combating drug addiction, the three Maghreb
countries are members of the Mediterranean Network for Co-operation
on Drugs and Addictions (MedNET), which was set up in 2006 by the
Council of Europe’s Pompidou Group (multidisciplinary co-operation
forum to prevent drug abuse and illicit trafficking in drugs) to
foster co-operation, exchange and two-way knowledge transfer on
drugs including alcohol and tobacco between North African and European
countries (North-South and South-North) but also among North African
countries (South-South). The most recent meeting of the network
was held in Algiers on 25 June 2007.
60. Morocco and Algeria took this co-operation forward when in
2007 they joined the Venice Commission, a Council of Europe advisory
body, to ensure that their constitutional provisions would evolve
towards constitutional standards in keeping with democracy and the
rule of law. With Kyrgyzstan, the Republic of Korea and Chile, Morocco
and Algeria have thus joined the Venice Commission’s member states,
but not those of the Council of Europe.
5.2. Reinforcement possibilities
61. First of all, it is advisable
not to envisage a brutal but a progressive reinforcement of co-operation between
the Council of Europe and the Maghreb countries and to have the
possibility of allowing each state to choose the degree of closeness
of its co-operation with the Council of Europe.
5.2.1. Observer status, “associate
partners” or “partners for democracy”
62. For the countries that want
it, observer status with the Council of Europe could be the most
consummate form of co-operation with the Organisation. The following
states enjoy this status at present: the Holy See (1970), the United
States (1995), Canada (1996), Japan (1996) and Mexico (1999).
63. Furthermore, in accordance with paragraph 1 of Statutory Resolution
(93) 26 of the Committee of Ministers, the national parliaments
of Council of Europe non-member states may thus acquire observer
status with the Parliamentary Assembly and so Israel, Canada and
Mexico, as holders of this status, can be authorised by the President
of the Assembly to speak and to attend meetings of the various Parliamentary Assembly
committees. The Algerian authorities could be interested and ready
to consider observer status. Tunisia also seems interested.
64. The Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly has long mooted
a possible reform to observer status to allow the Organisation to
receive new partners beyond its natural boundaries.
Recommendation 1724 on the Council of Europe and the European Neighbourhood
Policy of the European Union (2005) and
Resolution 1506 on the external relations of the Council of Europe (2006),
moreover, look to the strengthening of co-operation with the countries
of the southern Mediterranean and central Asia.
65. In addition, a new status midway between observer and special
guest status could come into being to associate more lastingly the
states that signify their desire for co-operation with the Council
of Europe but do not yet fully comply with the Organisation’s principles.
The idea was put forward in an earlier report
on
the external relations of the Council of Europe. This referred to
“associate partners” or “partners for democracy”. At all events
the idea is still relevant and could be put into effect with Maghreb
countries not interested in being given observer status.
5.2.2. Special guest status
66. Special guest status allows
the first stage of more advanced collaboration to be set in motion.
Since 1989 this status, which concerns the legislative assemblies
of Council of Europe non-member countries, has enabled guests to
meet the members of the various committees, to follow current work,
and to give their opinion on proceedings of relevance to them. However,
this status applies only to states with potential to become members
of the Council of Europe while waiting for them to achieve full
compliance with the values upheld by the Council of Europe in the
field of human rights and democracy. The Council of Europe currently
has 47 member countries. This status is only of interest to European
non-member countries like Belarus.
5.2.3. Parliamentary co-operation
67. This form of co-operation may
also be contemplated and, for the Council of Europe and its Parliamentary Assembly,
would involve strengthening its links with the national parliaments
of the three Maghreb countries. Moreover, when visiting the Council
of Europe, Mrs Nouzha Chekrouni, Minister Delegate to the Minister
for Foreign Affairs and Co-operation of Morocco in charge of Moroccans
living abroad, expressed the desire “to explore all possible avenues
for a horizontal and vertical partnership between parliamentarians”.
In
one of my previous reports, I have already mentioned the possibility
of the Council of Europe’s co-operating more closely with Morocco.
My former colleague David Atkinson fully shared my view about Algeria
in stating that “both parties could only benefit from it, and it
would be an important step towards security and co-operation in
the Mediterranean region”.
The
possibility of co-operation has also been greeted with considerable
enthusiasm in Algeria.
68. The Parliament of Kazakhstan in April 2004 signed a co-operation
agreement with the Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly. This
working agreement has strengthened links between the national parliament
and the Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly.
69. This type of association can also take on a more global character
by associating not individual states but, collectively, the three
countries banded together in the Arab Maghreb Union (AMU), a regional
grouping created in 1989 and comprising Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia,
Libya and Mauritania. Co-operation between our Parliamentary Assembly
and the Consultative Chamber of the AMU could thus be considered.
70. The Parliamentary Assembly has already embarked on interparliamentary
co-operation, which it has furthered with other international parliamentary
assemblies such as the European Parliament, the Western European
Union, the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly, the Inter-Parliamentary
Union, Benelux, the Nordic Council, the Parliamentary Assembly for
Black Sea Economic Co-operation (PABSEC) and the Commonwealth of
Independent States (CIS).
71. Such co-operation could take the form of a parliamentary delegation
at Assembly proceedings, particularly the sessions (as early as
January 2008), joint meetings of relevant committees, conferences, hearings
and so on dealing with questions such as inter-faith and intercultural
dialogue, education and the economy.
72. At the institutional level, it could take the form of assistance
in administrative staff training, participation in study visits
or internships, and all forms of discussion.
5.2.4. Intergovernmental co-operation
73. Besides being members of some
of the Council of Europe’s enlarged partial agreements, such as
the one on the Venice Commission (joined by Algeria and Morocco
in 2007) and the European and Mediterranean Major Hazards Agreement
(EUR-OPA), which is a forum for co-operation between European and
southern Mediterranean countries on major natural and technological
hazards (joined by Algeria in 1991 and Morocco in 1995), the Maghreb
countries are observer members of the European Pharmacopoeia Commission
and have ratified certain Council of Europe conventions such as
the Convention on the Conservation of European Wildlife and Natural
Habitats (Tunisia in 1996 and Morocco in 2001) and the Anti-Doping
Convention (Tunisia in 2004).
74. Further progress could be made in this intergovernmental co-operation
if the Maghreb countries were to join the North-South Centre, a
body whose task is to provide a framework for European co-operation
intended to raise public awareness about issues of global interdependence
and promote mutual aid policies in keeping with the Council of Europe’s
aims and principles. Joining this body would be seen as a clear
sign of a desire to revitalise the natural dialogue between the
two shores of the Mediterranean.
6. Benefits that these countries
bring to the Council of Europe
75. Enhancement of co-operation
between the Council of Europe and the Maghreb would lead to mutual enrichment.
It would send out to the whole world a signal of tolerance and openness,
far beyond Europe’s geographical borders. It would thus confirm
the Council of Europe in its role co-ordinating activities in favour
of the universal values of law, justice and solidarity. But above
all, by working more closely with the Muslim countries, it would
be a telling contradiction to the threat of a clash of civilisations
and to those who too often erroneously place the West in opposition
to the Muslim world. Co-operating more actively with the Maghreb countries
would afford the Council of Europe a better knowledge of the problems
that affect the Muslim countries and inevitably the European states.
76. Enhancement of co-operation between the Council of Europe
and the Maghreb would also enable member states with large Maghrebi
communities (France, Spain, Italy, Netherlands, Germany) to forge
more fundamental links with these communities, including them in
a clearly European perspective and addressing, possibly in a new
way, all the issues relating to immigration and integration.
77. The Maghreb is accustomed to processes of co-operation with
the European institutions but above all it is an obvious bridge
to the Middle East and an open window on Africa, which is in such
great need of democracy and human rights. My visits to the Algerian
media convinced me of this desire of mutual open-mindedness and
the need for discussion and information.
78. As Chairperson of the Sub-Committee on the Middle East, I
am particularly alert to the upheavals of every kind that beset
this region. I am fundamentally convinced that by strengthening
co-operation with the Maghreb countries, the Council of Europe can
build a bridge to the Middle East and increase our Assembly’s presence
in this sorely troubled part of the world. While not siding, our
collaboration with the member countries of the Arab League and the
Islamic Conference Organisation can only enhance our presence in
the Middle East and the understanding of its problems.
79. Africa has so far remained conspicuously absent from Council
of Europe external relations (no African country is an observer),
and it is unfortunate that the universal appeal of its values does
not find a greater response in that continent at a time when it
is ravaged by new tragedies like Darfur. Stronger co-operation between
the Council of Europe and the Maghreb must be perceived as a sign
of interest and a powerful boost to our Organisation’s values in
the whole of the African continent and in an ever more globalised
world.
7. Conclusions
80. The Maghreb countries have
long had a common history with Europe, and keep up sustained regular co-operation
with our continent’s institutions. Both the Council of Europe and
these countries would have everything to gain by undertaking more
intensive co-operation. There is a determination in the Maghreb
to go further in promoting human rights and democracy, a determination
long considered dangerous to power in this region of the world and
today rightly perceived as a factor of stability.
81. The Council of Europe and its Parliamentary Assembly should
bear in mind the fact that there is a great opportunity to unlock
the doors of democracy and human rights for this region of the world
that wishes to join our Organisation and Europe. At a time when
the idea of a “Mediterranean Union” is afoot, a body which would indubitably
seize upon the Council of Europe’s cherished themes, the Council
might regret not having looked towards the southern Mediterranean,
described as the most uneven frontier in the world by the former President
of the European Parliament, Joseph Borrell.
Reporting committee: Political Affairs Committee. Reference
to committee: Reference No. 3330 of 16 March 2007.
Draft resolution and draft recommendation unanimously adopted
by the committee on 11 December 2007.
Members of the committee: Mr Abdülkadir Ateş (Chairperson),
Mr Konstantin Kosachev (Vice-Chairperson), Mr Zsolt
Németh (Vice-Chairperson), Mr Giorgi Bokeria (Vice-Chairperson),
Mr Miloš Aligrudić, Mr Claudio Azzolini,
Mr Denis Badré, Mr Radu Mircea Berceanu,
Mr Andris Bērzinš, Mr Alexandër Biberaj,
Mrs Guðfinna Bjarnadóttir, Ms Raisa Bohatyryova, Mr Predrag Bošković,
Mr Luc Van den Brande, Mr Lorenzo
Cesa, Mr Mauro Chiaruzzi, Ms Elvira Cortajarena,
Ms Anna Čurdová, Mr Rick
Daems, Mr Dumitru Diacov, Mr Michel Dreyfus-Schmidt, Ms Josette Durrieu, Mr Frank Fahey, Mr Joan
Albert Farré Santuré, Mr Pietro Fassino (alternate: Mr Pietro Marcenaro), Mr Per-Kristian Foss,
Ms Doris Frommelt, Mr Jean-Charles Gardetto, Mr Charles Goerens,
Mr Andreas Gross, Mr Davit Harutyunyan, Mr Serhiy Holovaty,
Mr Joachim Hörster, Mrs Sinikka
Hurskainen, Mr Tadeusz Iwiński,
Mr Bakir Izetbegović, Mrs Corien W.A. Jonker, Ms Darja Lavtižar-Bebler,
Mr Göran Lindblad, Mr Younal Loutfi, Mr Mikhail Margelov (alternate:
Mr Victor Kolesnikov), Mr Tomasz
Markowski, Mr Dick Marty, Mr Frano Matušić, Mr Murat Mercan, Mr Mircea
Mereută, Mr Dragoljub Mićunović (alternate: Mr Željko Ivanji), Mr Jean-Claude Mignon, Ms Nadezhda Mikhailova, Mr Aydin
Mirzazada, Mr João Bosco Mota Amaral,
Ms Natalia Narochnitskaya, Mrs Miroslava Nĕmcová, Mr Hryhoriy
Nemyrya, Mr Fritz Neugebauer, Mrs Kristiina Ojuland, Mr Theodoros
Pangalos, Mr Aristotelis Pavlidis, Mr Christos Pourgourides, Mr John
Prescott (alternate: Mr John Austin),
Mr Gabino Puche, Mr Lluís Maria
de Puig, Mr Jeffrey Pullicino Orlando, Mr Andrea Rigoni, Lord Russell-Johnston, Mr Oliver Sambevski, Mr Ingo
Schmitt, Ms Hanne Severinsen,
Mr Samad Seyidov, Mr Leonid Slutsky,
Mr Rainder Steenblock, Mr Zoltán Szabó, Baroness Taylor of Bolton
(alternate: Mr Denis MacShane),
Mr Mehmet Tekelioğlu, Mr Mihai
Tudose, Mr José Vera Jardim, Ms Birutė Vėsaitė, Mr Björn Von Sydow,
Mr Harm Evert Waalkens, Mr David Wilshire,
Mr Wolfgang Wodarg, Ms Gisela Wurm, Mr Boris Zala, Mr Krzysztof Zaremba.
Ex officio: Mr Mátyás
Eörsi, Mr Tiny Kox.
NB: The names of those members present at the meeting are
printed in bold.
See 6th Sitting, 23 January 2008 (adoption of the draft resolution,
as amended, and the draft recommendation); and Resolution 1598 and Recommendation
1825.