Morocco Hails Israel Ties, Urges Peace with Palestinians

RABAT (Reuters) —
Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid speaks during a news conference with Moroccan Foreign Minister Nasser Bourita in Rabat, Wednesday. (REUTERS/Youssef Boudlal)

Morocco’s foreign minister told his visiting Israeli counterpart on Wednesday that their countries’ newly upgraded ties would bring economic benefits, and urged him to work towards a two-state solution in Israel’s long-running conflict with the Palestinians.

Nasser Bourita hosted Yair Lapid in the first visit by Israel’s top diplomat to the North African kingdom since 2003, after the two countries agreed in December to resume diplomatic relations under a U.S.-brokered deal.

Morocco and Israel relaunched direct flights last month, and during a meeting at the Moroccan foreign ministry on Wednesday, Bourita and Lapid signed three cooperation agreements dealing with diplomatic consultation, culture and air transit.

“Our ties with Israel are unlike any other ties,” Bourita, standing alongside Lapid, told reporters, saying that Morocco’s Jewish heritage was a core component of its identity.

But reiterating Morocco’s long-standing support for the Palestinians, Bourita said: “There is a need to restore trust between all parties … and refrain from fuelling tension in order to pave the way for a political solution based on the two-state solution.”

Moroccan officials say they have restored the mid-level relations that Rabat cooled in 2000 in solidarity with the Palestinians, who launched an intifada, or uprising, that year.

Lapid said Israel’s upgraded ties with Morocco would bring “benefits (for) tourism and the economy, for trade and cultural exchange, (and) for friendship and cooperation.”

During his two-day visit, Lapid will inaugurate Israel’s diplomatic mission in Rabat and visit Casablanca’s Temple Beth-El – a centerpiece of the country’s historic Jewish community.

Morocco had one of the largest Jewish communities in the region until Israel’s founding in 1948. As Jews fled or were expelled from many Arab countries, an estimated 250,000 left Morocco for Israel from 1948 to 1964.

Only about 3,000 Jews remain in Morocco, but hundreds of thousands of Israelis claim some Moroccan ancestry.

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