Abstract

France in Morocco

Dewey, Stoddard | April 6, 1916 issue

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Italy has renounced her treaty privilege of the capitulations in French Morocco. This is a beginning of the final liquidation of this unsettling war. It is a step forward in the international recognition of France's full protectorate and an encouragement to the legitimate extension of French activity in North Africa. The capitulations were a servitude which France was obliged to accept with the protectorate before the war. They gave the right to different nations, to Italy, for example, to have their own consuls judge complaints made against their citizens residing in Morocco.

See Also:

INTERNATIONAL relations; INTERNATIONAL law; TREATIES; PROTECTORATES; FRANCE; MOROCCO
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