International News

Top court overturns decision to quash EU-Morocco trade deal

LUXEMBOURG, (MILLAT+APP/AFP) – The EU’s top court
on Wednesday overturned a lower tribunal’s decision to quash a European trade deal with Morocco, ruling against a group seeking independence for the Western Sahara.
Morocco suspended links with Brussels early this year after the
General Court of the EU, the bloc’s second highest court, annulled the deal on the grounds that it illegally applied to the Western Sahara, which faces an independence fight from the Front Polisario.
But in its verdict, the EU Court of Justice said it “dismisses the
action for annulment brought by the Front Polisario against the Council’s decision to conclude the Liberalisation Agreement.”
The European Council, which groups the 28 member states, appears set
to go ahead to reinstate the trade agreement, though the court did not explicitly say so.
The Polisario Front, a group which seeks independence for the Western
Sahara, had challenged the 2012 trade deal. The EU in turn appealed against the decision to overturn the pact.
Western Sahara is a former Spanish colony now controlled by Morocco.
The top court ruled: “Having concluded that the Liberalisation
Agreement does not apply to the territory of Western Sahara, the Court sets aside the judgment of the General Court.”