In August 2012, the Dutch government was the first EU government to state that Western Sahara produce should not benefit from the tariff schemes granted to Morocco. The statement was the result of parliamentary questions based on Western Sahara Resource Watch's report 'Label and Liability', which documents how tomatoes produced in occupied Western Sahara find their way to EU supermarkets stamped as from Morocco.What is EU's position on labelling of products from occupied Western Sahara? The EU Commission has now for the third time published a response to a parliamentary question on the matter, but the latest version fails to address the question.
A clarification by the EU Commission on labelling of products from Western Sahara was published, then removed, then published again and has now been removed again from EU websites.
Two weeks ago, the EU Commission announced that products from Western Sahara should be labelled accordingly, only to withdraw that statement the very next day. Today, the Commission reaffirms its original position.
On 5 February 2020, the EU Commission announced that products from Western Sahara should be labelled accordingly. But about 24 hours later, all traces to that statement had been removed from EU websites.