Algerian official warns of further measures against Morocco
Algeria may escalate its dispute with Morocco and take more steps after having cut off relations and closed airspace, a senior Algerian diplomat said on Friday.
"The adoption of additional measures cannot be ruled out," Amar Belani, the Foreign Ministry official responsible for Maghreb countries told Reuters without saying what other measures it may consider.
Relations between the North African neighbours have been bad for decades and their border has been closed since 1994, but have deteriorated since a dispute over the territory of Western Sahara blew up again last year.
Morocco regards Western Sahara as its territory, but the Algeria-backed Polisario Front movement seeks the region's independence.
Last year Polisario said it was resuming an armed struggle after decades of truce and the United States acknowledged Moroccan sovereignty over Western Sahara in return for Rabat boosting ties with Israel, a state Algeria does not recognise.
A senior Moroccan diplomat has backed calls for the self-determination of Algeria's Kabylie region, something Algiers has called unacceptable interference in its internal affairs.
It accuses Morocco of supporting MAK, a Kabylie separatist group that the Algerian government has labelled a terrorist organisation and which it has accused, alongside an Islamist group called Rashad, of setting deadly wildfires.
Algiers on Aug. 24 cut off diplomatic ties with Morocco, citing the alleged support for MAK, as well as Western Sahara and other issues.
Morocco said in response that Algeria was unjustified in cutting ties and its arguments were "fallacious and even absurd". MAK has denied setting any fires.
Moroccan King Mohammed has called for borders to reopen and ties to improve and offered to help Algeria deal with its wildfires, to which Algeria did not respond.
Algeria has indicated it would not renew a gas supply contract and on Wednesday said it was closing its airspace to all Moroccan flights, actions that Moroccan sources have said will have little practical impact.
"Algeria will show extreme vigilance and absolute firmness for the protection of its national territory," Belani told Reuters.
(Reuters)