The Netherlands slams 'unnecessary' extradition row with Morocco after Rabat summoned its ambassador

The Netherlands slams 'unnecessary' extradition row with Morocco after Rabat summoned its ambassador
Dutch officials slammed Morocco's "incomprehensible and unnecessary" decision to summon its ambassador home in a row about the extradition of an alleged drug trafficker on Sunday.
2 min read
25 June, 2017
Morocco's decision to summon the Dutch ambassador was 'unnecessary', officials said [AFP]

The Netherlands slammed Morocco's "incomprehensible and unnecessary" decision to summon its ambassador home in a row about the extradition of an alleged drug trafficker on Sunday.

"The Netherlands is committed now and in the future to an effective collaboration with Morocco based on international legal frameworks and the protection of the rule of law," they said in a joint statement.

"In that light, the Moroccan statement is incomprehensible and unnecessary."

Late on Saturday, Morocco said it has been in talks with Dutch officials in the past two days urging them to extradite "a notorious drug trafficker" who allegedly funds "some groups in northern Morocco".

It had demanded "concrete and urgent measures," and had decided to immediately recall its ambassador for consultations, stressing his return would depend on how the case develops.

But the Dutch foreign and justice ministries voiced bafflement about the situation.

While the man at the centre of the row was not officially named, a senior Moroccan government source and Dutch media named him as former Moroccan lawmaker, Said Chaou.

Chaou backs independence for Morocco's Rif region, hit by weeks of protests and has reportedly posted messages online in support of demonstrators demanding an end to corruption and jobs for the mainly Berber area.

Moroccan officials said two international arrest warrants had been issued against him, including one in 2010.

According to a second 2015 warrant, Chaou was living in The Netherlands and was accused of corruption and drug trafficking. Moroccan authorities allege he trafficked several tonnes of cannabis into Europe.

He was reportedly arrested in 2015 in the southern Dutch town of Roosendaal as part of a crackdown on a drug network, the Dutch broadcaster NOS said on Sunday. 

But his current whereabouts remain unclear, and the Dutch justice ministry said it "could not discuss individual cases".

According to the Moroccan embassy website in The Hague, Abdelouahab Bellouki has been his country's envoy in The Netherlands since 2013.