The '
Arab Maghreb Union' (
Arabic: Ø§ØªØØ§Ø¯ المغرب العربي;
transliterated: Ittihad al-Maghrib al-Araby,
French:''Union du Maghreb arabe'') is a
Pan-Arab trade agreement aiming for economic and political unity in
Northern Africa.
The idea for an economic union of the
Maghreb began with the independence of
Tunisia and
Morocco in
1956. It was not until thirty years later, though, that five Maghreb
states -
Algeria,
Libya,
Mauritania,
Morocco, and
Tunisia - met for the first Maghreb summit. The following year, in
1989, the agreement was formally signed by all member nations. There is a rotating chairmanship, which is held in turn by each nation. The current secretary-general is Tunisian diplomat
Habib Ben Yahia.
However, traditional rivalries between Morocco and Algeria, and the unsolved question of
Western Sahara's sovereignty have blocked union meetings since the early
nineties, despite several attempts to re-launch the political process. The latest top-level conference, in mid-
2005, was derailed by Moroccan refusal to meet, due to Algeria's vocal support for
Saharan independence.
Members
★ (1989)
★ (1989)
★ (1989)
★ (1989)
★ (1989)
References
★ Bensouiah, Azeddine (26 June, 2002).
"Stunted growth of the Arab Maghreb Union". ''Panapress.''
See also
★
List of Trade blocs
★
African Economic Community (AEC)
★
Euro-Mediterranean free trade area (EU-MEFTA)
★
Middle East Free Trade Area (US-MEFTA)
★
Agadir Agreement
★
Arab League
★
GAFTA
★
Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA)
External links
★
Arab Maghreb Union website
★
Maghreb Arab Online