Monday, July 28, 2014

Eid El Fitr will be on Tuesday July 29


The Moroccan Ministry of Religious Affairs has announced that Morocco will celebrate the holiday of Eid El Fitr, which marks the end of Ramadan, on Tuesday July 29, 2014



Most Muslims countries such as Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Egypt, announced earlier on Sunday that they would celebrate Eid El Fitr on Monday.

Unlike in previous years, Morocco started this year’s Ramadan the same day as most Arab and Muslim countries, on June 29.

The calculations of the Islamic calendar are based on the lunar calendar, which causes the Islamic months to move in the Gregorian calendar approximately 11 days every year.

The beginning of Islamic months may also vary from one country to another depending on whether the moon has been sighted or not.



The View from Fez team hopes that our readers have a happy and peaceful Eid.


A reminder that with the end of Ramadan Morocco will return to daylight saving on Saturday. See details here: Daylight Saving Morocco 

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Saturday, July 26, 2014

Daylight Saving in Morocco Returns August 2nd



A reminder that with the end of Ramadan, Morocco returns to daylight saving and we will again enjoy brighter evenings

On the 2nd of August  2014 - Daylight Saving Time Starts

Saturday, 2 August,  at 02:00:00 turn your clocks forward 1 hour to 03:00:00

Daylight saving will end on Sunday, 26 October when at 03:00:00 clocks are turned backward 1 hour.



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Friday, July 25, 2014

Volubilis Music Festival 15th Edition


The 15th Edition of the International Festival of Volubilis Traditional World Music in Meknes ~ July 31 to August 3


The program includes an interesting mix of artists from around the world including the Palestinian group Dalal and the extremely popular Moroccan Gnawa musician Maalem Hamid Kasri. 

Hamid El Kasri

Under the High Patronage of His Majesty King Mohammed VI, the Ministry of Culture has organised the 15th edition of the International Festival of Volubilis Traditional World Music. 

The 15th edition intends to build bridges between the past, present and future with the celebration of archaeological sites through their integration into the economic, cultural and environmental dynamism of the country.

The programme this year includes performers from Palestine, Spain, Ukraine, Ivory Coast, Italy, Gabon and Morocco.

This edition will pay tribute to two great pioneers of Moroccan music, Mahmoud Al-Idrisi and Amal Abdelkader.

Programme
Parade of troops 19 + Show: 00 Thursday, 31/07/2014
Opening Ceremony Site Volubilis 8:30 p.m. Friday, 01/08/2014
Troupe Anwar DAKAKI-Morocco
Tribute: Mahmoud Al Idrisi and Amal Aberlkader
Troupe Dalal-Palestine
Ukrania Theatre Troupe Arkou-Lahboul 8:30 p.m. Saturday, 08/02/2014
Flamenco troupe, led by artist Maria Molyneux Spain
Troupe Maalem Hamid Kasri-Morocco
Troupe "Onoanzi" Côte d'Ivoire Theatre Lahboul 8:30 p.m. Sunday, 08/03/2014
Troupe Neapolis Oonsompel-Italy
Troupe Oulad Bouazaoui-Morocco

Contacts
M.Bouselham Daif
Mail: bouselham.daif @ gmail.com


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Thursday, July 24, 2014

The Last Few Days of Ramadan 2014


While the final days of Ramadan approach there are still some important events in store. Among them are the celebration tonight (the 27th night of Ramadan) of Laylat Al Qadr and Leilat Sabawachrine.


Laylat Al Qadr is considered the holiest night of the year for Muslims, and is traditionally celebrated on the 27th day of Ramadan. It is known as the "Night of Power," and commemorates the night that the Quran was first revealed to the Prophet Muhammad, beginning with the exhortation, "Read! In the Name of your Lord, Who has created (all that exists)," in Surat Al-Alaq.

The Prophet Muhammad did not mention exactly when the "Night of Power" would be, although most scholars believe it falls on one of the odd-numbered nights of the final ten days of Ramadan, such as the 19th, 21st, 23rd, 25th, or 27th days of Ramadan. It is most widely believed to fall on the 27th day of Ramadan.

Many Muslims observe this occasion with study, devotional readings, and prayer. Some Muslims participate in a spiritual retreat called itikaf, where they spend all ten days in the mosque reading the Quran and praying.

Photo: Suzanna Clarke

Leilat Sabawachrine - literally the "night of the 27th day of Ramadan" - is a night especially for children - a time when they dress in their finest clothes. For girls this also means having their hands and feet covered in beautiful henna designs and wearing makeup and jewellery. Once dressed, they take to the streets where many of them were happy to receive gifts of sweets or money.

Thank the D'kak!

And late at night try and find the D'kak and offer him a little money for the work he has been doing making sure that people don't miss Suhoor, the final meal before the Fajr (dawn) prayer and the beginning of another day fasting. The whole purpose of Suhoor is to provide people fasting with enough nourishment and energy to keep them going for the next sixteen hours. During those hours an overwhelming majority of Moroccans will abstain from food, drink, cigarettes and sex.

Yassine Boudouàià - one of the D'kaks in the Fez Medina . Photo Sandy McCutcheon

To make certain you don't miss this meal is the job of the Bou Damdoum in Amazigh or D’kak in Moroccan Arabic, (the drummer), who uses his drums or N’ffar (a long horn that makes buzzing sound) to guarantee that everyone in the neighbourhood wakes up in time to cook and then enjoy their Suhoor meal.

This is a very old tradition and has been observed in a number of countries. An early report of the work done by a D'kak in Algiers is in the remarkable work by the cleric Antonio de Sosa. In his Topography of Algiers (1612) - Edited with an introduction by María Antonia Garcés. Translated by Diana de Armas Wilson - Sosa has a brief description of the D'kak during Ramadan... "When midnight approaches, some Muslims, out of devotion, walk the streets sounding certain drums, whose sound awakens sleepers so that they can return to their food..." This is the same custom that still exists in the Fez Medina.

Finally - at iftar, last night, people were not the only ones looking forward to breaking the fast!



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Tuesday, July 22, 2014

Ramadan Music ~ Fez Hamadcha Give Free Concert ~ Photo Essay

As part of the cultural offerings during the long Ramadan nights in Fez the Hamadcha Sufi Brotherhood have been performing for the public in the Ville Nouvelle. The View from Fez was invited to the latest performance...
Abderrahim Amrani Marrakchi with some of the younger members of the Brotherhood
Literally drumming up a crowd on the street

As is often the case in Fez, the concert appeared to be impromptu with little or no publicity. However, as is also the case, a few minutes of performing in the street was all it took to gather a crowd who were then invited inside the cultural centre

Follow the flag bearers - gathering a crowd
Flag women Rachida El Jokh (left) and Maha McCutcheon (right) 
Abderrahim Amrani Marrakchi  playing gimbri
Abderrahim Amrani Marrakchi  and the Cultural Centre Directors


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Sunday, July 20, 2014

SUNDAY FEATURE ~ Middle Eastern Singers Drawn to Moroccan Dialect.


The View from Fez is in debt to Morocco World News and the author, Moulay Abdellah Taibi, for this interesting article on the reasons that Darija is becoming the language of choice amongst some of the top non-Moroccan performers


Many Middle Eastern singers are increasingly attracted to the Moroccan dialect, “darija,” as a new singing style, and they are snapping up opportunities to be admired by the Moroccan public. I describe this as a weird phenomenon because darija has always been seen by Middle Easterners as an odd dialect. Whenever you communicate in darija with a Middle Easterner, he or she would not miss the chance to comment, “your dialect is so difficult!”

This new trend towards Moroccan darija might be seen as reconciliation with this “weird” dialect, but it would be too simplistic and naïve to think so. Singing in darija is merely a strategy used by these artists and their producers to make a living off the Moroccan public—no emotions are involved. The uprisings and chaotic circumstances in the Arab countries put the music industry at stake, leaving singers in a precarious situation. So, singing in darija can help ride out the storm. For this reason, Morocco, which has not been affected by the same hardships resulting from the Arab uprisings, is regarded as the sole calm harbor to land where a new style in the music business can flourish.

Diana Haddad

The Moroccan market is the most suitable market during this period of time and, of course, singers are smacking their lips at having a chance to perform at Moroccan festivals such as Mawazin, which is ranked among the most successful festival in the world. Music producers think that singing in darija will certainly affect the Moroccan public, so they penetrate their pockets through their hearts. Popular singers such as Asala Nasri, Assi Hellani, Diana Haddad, and many others will surely increase their fan base in Morocco when they sing in darija. The public will feel proud to listen to these giant singers recognize our “pathetic and outcast” dialect, and they will think that these singers are doing us a huge favor by promoting it.

All dialects of Arabic have almost the same level of complexity, and saying that one is easier or more difficult than another is just a fable. They are all derived from the classical standard Arabic and affected by different factors before reaching their current states. The difference between these dialects from the Gulf to the Atlantic is nothing but word choice. For example, a Moroccan would say: Ana bghit nmchi l ddar while an Egyptian would prefer the form: Ana 3ayez ArouH Elbit. From the above example, we can see that 3ayez and bghit / Nmchi and ArouH/ ddar and Elbit are mere synonyms in classical Arabic. With the addition of different rhythms, sounds, and intonations, dialects become slightly different from one another, but stubborn minds and selfish speakers make the gap sound much more important than it really is.

Asala Nasri


It is great to learn and speak other languages and dialects, but, unfortunately, this often implies certain needs and weaknesses. An Amazigh who learns Arabic shows that his/her language is weak and that he/she needs Arabic; the same goes for an Arab who learns French or English. The same happens each time we converge to another speaker’s language or dialect. Sociolinguists explain that the person with higher needs or whose language, culture, or even economy is weaker is the one who converges more, whereas the one with lower needs or, whose language is powerful, tends to diverge.

Assimilating to another speaker’s tongue may be our fate in Morocco. To some extent, people would not consider that an issue; on the contrary, people consider code-switching to fit one’s interlocutor’s use of language as a positive behavior. But it is certainly an issue if the notion of power and weakness is hovering within a conversation. Whenever you meet a European, he/she would not make an effort to speak in your language because he/she knows that you are going to adapt to his/her language. This case can be tolerated to some extent if you are in their country and you need that language for interaction. However, the same goes for Arabs as well. I feel annoyed whenever I see a Moroccan stumbles to speak another Arabic dialect in an ugly accent while his/her interlocutor is speaking at ease and proud to be the dominant.

Nowadays, for any dialect or language to be dominant, there are many factors. Among these, we have the media. The country with the most influential media has more chances to spread its language or dialect. For example, American English has more advantages today over its British counterpart thanks to Hollywood. Similarly, the Egyptian dialect of Arabic is boosted by their media in the Arab world.

Spreading languages and cultures may also be attributed to political factors. For example, when France and other former colonial powers retreated from their colonies, they obliged them to use their languages. Nowadays, the battle of imposing languages and dialects on others is still ongoing. In Morocco, for instance, the British Council and the American Embassy spare no effort in making their dialects the most used among English teachers and learners.


Within the Arab world, there is a movement led by Egyptians to crown their dialect as the spoken version of classical Arabic. I personally witnessed this when I was in the Fulbright program in 2012/2013, when all the Arab Fulbrighters were assembled in Istanbul for an orientation and enrichment program. We were given a textbook to teach Arabic to American university students. I was surprised to find that the book was in the Egyptian and Shami dialects of Arabic.

When I arrived in the University where I was to teach Arabic language and culture, I found that the same textbook was required by the syllabus, and that students had already bought it. I did not use that book because I come from Morocco, and I was to represent my country and culture. Besides, I cannot properly speak either the Shami or Egyptian dialects of Arabic.

I have nothing against speaking other tongues, no matter what they are, but I am strongly against feeling obliged to do it.

Moulay Abdellah Taibi is a Fulbright FLTA, at the college of Saint Rose Albany, New York where. He obtained a B.A in English Literature and BS in Tourism, Management and communication. He is a social activist and president of the Moroccan association “Art, Youth without borders”.




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Friday, July 18, 2014

Chellah Jazz Festival in Rabat this September


European Jazz and Moroccan music will meet again in September at the 19th edition of the Chellah Jazz Festival, which has now become a landmark event of the cultural scene in Morocco. The festival, to take place from 17 to 21 September, was initiated by the European Union in Morocco and is dedicated to the discovery of European jazz and the encounter between European and Moroccan jazz musicians


Ten European and five Moroccan bands will play together at the Festival. Alongside Moroccan musicians, jazz musicians from the Netherlands, Belgium, France, the UK, Italy, Germany, Bulgaria, Greece, Denmark, Sweden, Romania, Portugal, Spain, Finland and Poland will bring their styles and colours to the Festival.

"The European Union in Morocco imagined the Chellah Jazz festival to be the reflection of a cultural partnership between Europe and Morocco, offering musicians from different horizons a single expression platform,” said Rupert Joy, EU Ambassador in Morocco. “Brilliant Moroccan and European artists will share with us again moments of fruitful musical encounters.”

Chellah 2013

Historically, the richness of Moroccan music has always been the target of great jazz figures, to name pianist Randy Weston, probably the first musician to mix jazz with Moroccan music (Tanjah, Polydor Label 1973); percussionist Jauk El Maleh whose various academic experiments are still on the forefront; guitarist Pat Metheny considered as a special guest at Essaouira Gnawa Festival; and many others such as Omar Sosa, Wayne Shorter and recently Archie Shepp who found on the variety of Moroccan instruments and sounds interesting material to produce original jazz. Based on this idea, the festival seeks to sustain the close affiliation between jazz and Moroccan music.


Last year, over 7,000 people enjoyed listening to the music of European guest artists mixed with that of Oum, Bnet Houariyat, Driss El Maaloumi Rashid Karim Kadiri and Zeroual. This musical genre labelled ‘made ​​in Chellah’ is offered every year in a CD.


The festival website is here:  Chellah Jazz  (at the moment no programme is available)


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1800 KMS OF HIGHWAYS - Morocco On Road Building Spree


During the so called Arab Spring, Morocco was quick to implement massive infrastructure projects to provide employment. Once again, with the problems of Syria, ISIS and instability in Iraq, Gaza and Egypt, not only has Morocco increased its security programmes, but again embarked on creating stability through employment. The major thrust is a road building programme that will see the Kingdom build an additional 1800 kilometres of highways


During a session of the Moroccan parliament, the Moroccan Minister of Transport and Logistics, Mr. Aziz Rabbah, announced that Morocco has a serious plan to create an additional 1,800 kms of highways with work to commence before the end of 2014. However, the actual date of the effective implementation of the project has not been announced yet.

The plan for 1800 kms of highways aims to  improve road access to key economic cities of the country and in particular Fez,  Meknes, Marrakech, Safi, Beni Mellal, Tangier, Nador, and Guercif. It is also intended to strengthen the link between Agadir and the southern region.


At present Morocco has 1 511 kms of highways, but the number is expected to reach 1,800 by the end 2015 and the additional increase will bring the total to around 3,600 km.

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Thursday, July 17, 2014

Royal Air Maroc to Lease Four Ejets


Royal Air Maroc, the national carrier of Morocco, has decided to introduce the E190 as part of a fleet upgrade to open new routes and to increase the number of short and medium-haul frequencies from its Casablanca International Airport hub. The airline has signed a lease agreement for four E-Jets with Aldus Aviation, the Irish specialist E-Jet lessor. The first E190 is expected to be delivered during the second half of 2014


The news was reported on News Travel Daily, who quote John Slattery, Chief Commercial Officer, Embraer Commercial Aviation. "Morocco's geographical strategic position offers excellent potential for developing air links with Europe and Africa. With the E190, Royal Air Maroc will have the capability and flexibility to further develop its network with an ideal combination of frequency and seat capacity," he said "We welcome Royal Air Maroc to our family of E190 operators, all of whom have seen the potential of this proven and efficient platform to bolster their networks and complement their narrowbody jet operations."

The Embraer E-Jet family is a series of narrow-body medium-range twin-engine jet airliners produced by Brazilian aerospace conglomerate Embraer. Launched at the Paris Air Show in 1999, and entering production in 2002, the aircraft series has been a commercial success. The aircraft is used by both mainline and regional airlines around the world. Royal Air Maroc's E190s will be configured with 96 seats, 12 business class seats and 84 economy class seats, in a dual class layout and will be deployed on European and West African routes from the national carrier's base of Mohammed V International Airport, Casablanca, Morocco.

Royal Air Maroc's aircraft will join a fleet of approximately 70 E-Jets already in operation within Africa and the Middle East with Egyptair Express, Kenya Airways, LAM Mozambique, Oman Air, Petro Air, Royal Jordanian, Royal Omani Police, Saudi Arabia Airlines, and Saudi Aramco.


"While testing the aircraft on wet lease during the summer 2013 we became convinced that the E190's reliability and low operating costs will help Royal Air Maroc open new routes and increase frequencies to Europe and African cities," said Mr. Driss Benhima, CEO of Royal Air Maroc. "The aircraft perfectly matches our needs in terms of size and range without any compromise on comfort or baggage capacity."

"We are delighted to welcome Royal Air Maroc as a new client," said Mr. Phil Bolger, Chairman of Aldus. "These are four aircraft from our 20 E-Jets order and we're looking forward to a long and fruitful relationship with this flagship African carrier."

In related news...

Morocco World News reports on a big win for Royal Air Maroc when it was awarded Africa’s best regional airline for 2014 by Skytrax at the World Air Line Awards in Farnborough on Tuesday.

Royal Airlines Morocco landed in sixth place for the quality of the services provided by its staff. It also ranked 7th best airlines in Africa after South Africa Airways, Air Mauritius, Air Seychelles, Ethiopian Airlines, Kenya Airways and TAAG Angola Airlines.


With this ranking RAM has risen from a 2 star ranking to 3 stars on the Skytrax index.

“Having been awarded Africa’s best regional airline by Skytrax, is a deep tribute to RAM’s staff in order to improve their performance and raise the quality of services to reach the level of the top airline companies in the world, “ said the president of Royal Airlines Morocco, Driss Benhima in a press release.

“We shall be satisfied only when we reach 4 stars in the prestigious ranking of Skytrax”, he added

RAM gained this prestigious award thanks to the votes of passengers. Over a period of 10 months, the Skytrax World Airline Awards interviewed thousands of passengers in more than 160 countries including professional and private travelers.


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Tuesday, July 15, 2014

Fes to Celebrate 10th Festival of Amazigh Culture


The tenth edition of the Fes Festival of Amazigh (Berber) Culture will take place between the 5th and 7th of August. It will include an international congress with the theme: "The brewing of culture - Amazigh Hassania culture and their relationship with sub-Saharan culture"



There will be a large number of events including free concerts each evening at Bab Makina.



The opening night concert will be a popular event as along with the Catalonian group Xarnege and Moroccan Tililli, there will be a performance by the much loved Hamid El Kasri (pictured above).

Amazigh culture has much to celebrate: photo Sandy McCutcheon

LE 10ème FESTIVAL DE FES DE LA CULTURE AMAZIGHE

DU 5 AU 7 Septembre 2014
Tinawt tamaälant xf Tamazivt d landalus Fas 5-7 cutanbir 2014

Organisateurs Association Fès Saiss, Fondation Esprit de Fès, Centre Sud Nord
Partenaires : Région de Fès-Boulemane, Office National Marocain du Tourisme, Institut Royal de la Culture Amazighe, Fondation BMCE, Maroc Telecom, Wilaya de Fès-Boulemane, Conseil de la Ville de Fès, Université de Fès
Sites :
-CONGRES MONDIAL: PALAIS DES CONGRES (9:00 – 14 :00)
-FESTIVAL DANS LA VILLE : PLACE FLORENCE (19:00-21:00)
-SOIREES ARTISTIQUES : BAB MAKINA, MEDINA ((21: 30 – 23:30)
-EXPOSITIONS : PALAIS DES CONGRES (9:00 – 19 :00)
-THEATRE : COMPLEXE AL HOURRIA (Dimanche 15:30 – 17 :00)

Congrès International sur le thème : "LE BRASSAGE DE LA CULTURE AMAZIGHE ET DE LA CULTURE HASSANIA ET LEURS RELATIONS AVEC LES CULTURES SUB-SAHARIENNES"


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Ramadan ~ Feasting, Fasting ... and Wasting


Ramadan is celebrated as a month of piety, meditation, abstinence and sobriety yet Ramadan in Morocco is also the month in which the phenomenon of food waste explodes 

According to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) we consume an average of 20 kg of food per person per year. Also, according to statisticians, food waste accounts for between 95 to 115 kg per person per year in Europe and North America, while it is lower in Africa and Asia with an average of 6-11 kg - except during Ramadan when the numbers skyrocket.

Mohammed Aman is an ecologist and environmentalist based in Bahrain and is a specialist on waste statistics among Muslim communities. His findings show that Moroccans throw out more than 40% of dishes every single day of Ramadan. Another statistic shows that the amount of bread alone thrown out is equivalent to 10% of Moroccan cereal imports.

"People tend to purchase three times the amount of food they actually can consume for  Iftar (Ramadan breakfast); There are six types of cooked food on the tables of Muslims during Iftar, in three times the amounts needed. This results in 40% of food being wasted every day" ~ Mohammed Aman.

There is a cost to this as people tend to prepared dishes that are more expensive than usual.  Add into this the high prices that occur during Ramadan and you understand the reason that  many households take out loans to buy food - food that they do not actually need.

During Ramadan some products have their prices double or even triple. This can be explained either by the increase in demand, or scarcity of certain products such as dates this year. In addition, some shopkeepers simply raise the price during Ramadan. This is the case of vegetable and cooking oils.

The reason for this over purchasing and under consumption does not appear to be gluttony, but rather the social pressure to provide feasts for family and friends. There is an element of pride involved which unfortunately results in wastage.


The economist Rachid Maaroufi estimates that of the 4.1 billion loaves of bread eaten during Ramadan, 120 million are thrown out. He points the finger at the government, claiming that the  eradication of informal markets has exacerbated the problem. Local markets, he says, are more effective in supply as they are directly in touch with demand. He also notes that a lack of control of the chain in cold rooms has resulted in large quantities of produce perishing quickly.

However, Maaroufi does not shy away from blaming the consumer "We can not speak of waste without mentioning the responsibility of the citizens who does not have a culture of rational consumption" he says.

Unsurprisingly, the amount of waste is higher in wealthier communities with more upscale neighborhoods throwing out as much as 70% of the food they purchased.

Bouazza Kherrati, President of the Moroccan Federation consumer rights (FMDC), says that the general public is not aware of this waste and there is enough food in the waste bins to feed an impoverished African country.

For the last two years the Moroccan Federation of Consumer Rights has campaigned against over consumption during Ramadan. This year the government also launched a number of awareness campaigns in the media and the mosques on the same subject.  Sadly consumers do not appear to have been listening.


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Saturday, July 12, 2014

A Week of Accidents as Ramadan Temperatures Rise


Across Morocco the temperatures have been rising and by Tuesday will reach around 40 degrees Celsius in many places including Marrakech and Fez. Along the coast Rabat and Casablanca will escape the worst of the heat with temperatures in the high twenties.

At the same time road accidents and a building collapse have caused fatalities. Extra caution is required on the roads as the effects of fasting and low blood-sugar levels can affect drivers' response times.


Three people were killed and 30 others were injured, including nine seriously, in a road accident on Wednesday morning on the bypass between Rabat and Salé near Technopolis.  A truck registered in the European Union collided with a bus transporting employees at 6.45 causing the death of three girls. The wounded were transferred Provincial Hospital Sale and Ibn Sina hospital in Rabat.

On Friday two people died and three others were seriously injured in a road accident occurred on the highway in the town of Amskroud. The incident occurred in mid day, about 6 km from the toll station, where the driver of a truck registered in Spain hit a light car along the Marrakech-Agadir motorway.

The truck driver lost control of his vehicle before overturning and striking a light car registered in France, He died on the spot while another girl who sustained injuries died at the Hassan II Agadir hospital. The injured were transported to the hospital.

Buildings collapse in Casablanca - death toll may rise


Eight people were killed and at least 55 others were injured in the collapse early Friday morning of three buildings in the district of Burgundy in Casablanca. The collapse of these buildings occurred at about 2:30 am. and bodies of a small boy aged 10 and a woman of about 45 years were removed by firefighters after several hours of digging through the rubble. Rescuers aided by dogs are still continuing their search efforts to find other potential residents of these buildings that are still trapped.

All the wounded were evacuated to Moulay Youssef and the Centre Hospitalier Universitaire (CHU) Ibn Rushd prefectural hospital and after treating the injured seventeen remain in hospital.


HM King Mohammed VI (pictured above) visited the site immediately.  According to local press reports three other adjoining buildings were evacuated for safety.

The reasons behind this tragedy are still unknown. But according to residents interviewed by AFP, the collapse may have been caused by shoddy construction work on the lower floors of buildings. The construction dates back to the 1960s and 70s.

The Crown Prosecutor was quick in opening an investigation into the circumstances of the collapse. A judge, as well as the judicial police have also begun an investigation.


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