Morocco Stresses it Has Not Applied to Join BRICS

The headquarters of the Moroccan foreign ministry. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
The headquarters of the Moroccan foreign ministry. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
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Morocco Stresses it Has Not Applied to Join BRICS

The headquarters of the Moroccan foreign ministry. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
The headquarters of the Moroccan foreign ministry. (Asharq Al-Awsat)

Morocco has not made a formal request to join the BRICS grouping, said a well-informed source at the Moroccan Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

BRICS is a grouping of the world economies of Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa.

Morocco maintains substantial and promising bilateral relations with four members of the Group, except South Africa, with which it has strained ties. It is even linked to three of them by Strategic Partnership Agreements, added the source.

In response to recent media reports about a possible bid by the Kingdom to join the BRICS group, as well as its possible participation in the next BRICS/Africa meeting, scheduled for August 24 in Johannesburg, South Africa, the source stressed that this was not a BRICS or African Union initiative, but an invitation from South Africa, in its national capacity.

"It's a meeting organized on the basis of a unilateral initiative by the South African government," said the source.

The source went on to say that South Africa has always shown hostility towards the Kingdom and has systematically taken negative and dogmatic positions on the question of the Moroccan Sahara.

“Pretoria has thus multiplied, both nationally and within the African Union, its notoriously malicious actions against Morocco's higher interests.”

South African diplomacy is known for its light, improvised, and unpredictable management when it comes to organizing this kind of event, said the diplomatic source.

As proof, the source added the deliberate and provocative breaches of protocol that marked Morocco's invitation to this meeting. Worse still, many countries and entities appear to have been invited arbitrarily by the host country, without any real basis or prior consultation with the other member countries of the BRICS Group, it noted in reference to the Polisario being invited.

“It had thus become clear that South Africa was going to hijack this event from its nature and purpose, to serve a hidden agenda,” said the same source, noting that Morocco consequently ruled out, from the outset, any favorable reaction to the South African invitation.



Geagea Calls on Hezbollah to Work with Lebanese Army

 Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea. (Lebanese Forces)
Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea. (Lebanese Forces)
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Geagea Calls on Hezbollah to Work with Lebanese Army

 Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea. (Lebanese Forces)
Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea. (Lebanese Forces)

Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea urged on Friday Hezbollah to engage with the Lebanese army and devise a plan to dismantle its military infrastructure south and north of the Litani river.

In a press conference Friday, Geagea criticized Hezbollah for opening a front with Israel and accused the Shiite group of committing a “major crime” against the Lebanese people.

“We could have done without the martyrdom of more than 4,000 people, the displacement of thousands and the destruction across the country,” he said. “Despite all these tragedies, Hezbollah continues to talk about a victory using a bizarre and disconnected logic that has no basis in reality.”

Geagea’s comments came two days after a US-brokered ceasefire between Hezbollah and Israel went into effect. More than 3,900 people have been killed in Lebanon since Israel's conflict with Hezbollah escalated.

Geagea, whose Lebanese Forces Party holds the largest bloc in Lebanon’s 128-member parliament, also addressed Lebanon’s presidential deadlock. The country has been without a president for more than two years.

Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri has scheduled a session for presidential elections in January. "Consultations with opposition factions and our allies will begin in the coming days to explore the possibility of agreeing on presidential candidates and bringing them to parliament,” Geagea said.