Live… CEMO Seminar in Paris on hot issues in relations between two banks of the Mediterranean
The Reference broadcasts the Seminar of the Center
for Middle East Studies (CEMO) in Paris on hot issues in relations between two
banks of the Mediterranean.
Headed by renowned journalist, Dr Abdel Rahim Ali CEMO
will hold the seminar on problems in relations between countries on the two
banks of the Mediterranean.
The seminar will be held on the occasion of the two
banks of the Mediterranean summit, which will be held on June 23 and 24, in
Marseilles under the auspices of French President Emmanuel Macron.
On the occasion of the summit of the two banks of
the Mediterranean under the auspices of President Macron; CEMO would seize this
marvelous French opportunity to open all the hot issues in this regard.
The center would launch a seminar that coincides
with the summit on the next Monday to touch upon the topics which contaminate
the historical neighborhood amongst the nations of the two banks of the
Mediterranean…Originally it is a Latin name meant the sea that runs in the
middle of the lands.
The seminar will be held under the title of The
Mediterranean… Numerous struggles, few dreams. It will take place at Chaiux
hall at Prince de Galle hotel in Paris on the next Monday.
Apart from the Arab-Israeli conflict, which opens
the door wide for violence, the Arab Spring has had catastrophic effects.
The wave of terrorism, which has already moved from
the southern bank of the Mediterranean to its northern bank, makes it necessary
for Europeans to understand that they can no longer treat the enemies of
freedom as pro-democracy groups or organizations.
Immigration, environmental pollution and education
as problems make it necessary for Mediterranean states to hold dialogue and
also find suitable solutions to these problems.
Macron’s initiative derives its power after the
success of the Barcelona initiative (November 1995) launched by former
President Nicolas Sarkozy under the name of the Union for the Mediterranean.
Our meeting today is only an attempt to put forward
a package of ideas designed only to contribute to the dialogue that will take
place immediately after the conclusion of the Summit.
The French writer Albert Camus said, it does not
really matter what route you take, but what is important is your desire to get
there.
Our common destiny inevitably requires us to have
the desire to get a permanent and common dialogue.