Showing posts with label Moroccan Sahara. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Moroccan Sahara. Show all posts

Friday, September 21, 2018

Trump Advises Spain on Stopping Migrants


Just when you think the world couldn't get any weirder, the online news site L'Observateur reports on President Trump's incredible advice to the Spanish on how to stop illegal migrants

US President Donald Trump recently suggested to Spanish Foreign Minister Josep Borrell that Spain should building a "wall along the Sahara" to curb illegal immigration.

However, Josep Borrell was not convinced and told a public luncheon in  Madrid this week,"Closing ports is not a solution and building a wall along the Sahara, as President Trump recently suggested to me, is not a solution either".

The former president of the European Parliament went on to say that the US president had told him "make a wall along the Sahara".

"But do you know how big the Sahara is?" the Spanish minister said in response to Trump.

The wall that Donald Trump wants to build on the Mexican border to prevent the entry of illegal immigrants in the United States would measure him 3,200 kilometres and would cost up to 20 billion dollars (17 billion euros), according to some estimates.

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Monday, November 06, 2017

The Green March - Anniversary


November 6th is an important date in Morocco. On the occasion of the 42nd anniversary of the Green March, King Mohammed VI will address the nation on Monday evening. The speech will be broadcast on television and on the radio from 8:30 pm.


November 6, the day of the Green March is the anniversary of peaceful deployment in 1975 of 350,000 civilians who marched to recover the territory of Morocco's Western Sahara that had been previously occupied by Spain.


The Green March was a strategic mass demonstration coordinated by the Moroccan government. During this march 350,000 Moroccans converged on the city of Tarfaya in southern Morocco and waited for a signal from King Hassan II to cross into Western Sahara. They brandished Moroccan flags, U.S.A. flags, Saudi Arabia flags & Jordan flags; banners calling for the “return of the Moroccan Sahara.” The colour green for the march’s name was intended as a symbol of Islam. The Green March is considered an important symbol of Moroccan nationalism and liberation from colonialism.

No shots were fired, not a single drop of blood was shed and Morocco retrieved its Sahara.

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Saturday, November 05, 2016

41st Celebration of Morocco's Green March


The anniversary of the Green March on Sunday, November the 6th, is a special day for Moroccans. It is a day when the Kingdom unites are in stressing the renewed mobilisation of the King and people to not only defend but also continue the development of the Moroccan Sahara

The Green March was a popular march of enormous proportions. On November 6, 1975, approximately 350,000 unarmed Moroccans converged on the city of Tarfaya in southern Morocco and waited for a signal from King Hassan II to cross into the region of Sakiya Lhmra.
They brandished Moroccan flags and Qur'an as well as carrying banners calling for the return of the Moroccan Sahara, photographs of the King and the Qur'an; the colour green for the march's name was intended as a symbol of Islam. As the marchers reached the border, the Spanish Armed Forces backed down and Spanish troops also cleared some previously mined zones.


Last year King Mohammed VI visited the Sahara to mark the beginning of a new march for the development of the Saharan provinces.  Al Alam,  an Arabic-language paper, said at the time,"The country's advanced regionalisation is a democratic response from Morocco to the desperate attempts of those who want to challenge its historical and legitimate right to its southern provinces,"

This year is unusual in that King Mohammed VI is on a State visit to Senegal and a statement from the Ministry of the Royal Household, Protocol and Chancellery says that the Sovereign has decided to deliver his speech on the occasion of the celebration of the 41st anniversary of the Green March, from the city of Dakar.

"Having chosen a country other than Morocco, an African country, Senegal today, to give a traditional historical discourse is symbolic of the nature of the relationship between Morocco and Senegal, "said Senegalese President in a statement to the media, pointing out that this initiative shows "the choice of His Majesty to speak to Africa and Africans." President Macky Sall added: "His Majesty the King has a vision of Africa, and what should be the Africa of tomorrow. It also has ambitions for the continent."

The Moroccan media is united in reminding Moroccans that "there are very few events in the history of a country that transcend time and generations to remain vivid in the memory of all, old and young, there are few events that bear a historical grandeur and a sense of destiny and belonging. Morocco has such an event. That was the Green March, the unprecedented march, both symbolic and popular, of 350,000 Moroccans who walked hundreds of kilometres to peacefully recover a part of their country, the Western Sahara, which was under Spanish dominion."
No shots were fired, not a single drop of blood was shed and Morocco retrieved its Sahara. That was in 1975.
The North Africa Post concludes, "The centuries-old historical, geographical, and ethnical ties that existed between the Sahara and Northern Morocco that were broken by colonialism for decades were stitched again thanks to the genius idea of the late king Hassan II, the architect of the epic, who thought out and planned every detail of the March".


However, the Green March celebrations are not all about politics. The Royal Moroccan Football Federation (FRMF) is organising a “gala match” to celebrate the 41st anniversary. Festivities will take place at Sheikh Mohamed Laghdaf Stadium in Morocco’s Saharan Capital, Laayoune, with many legendary international footballers in attendance.

Maradona heads to Morocco for Green March match

Former Argentine football icon Diego Armando Maradona, Liberian George Weah, Ghanaian Abedi Pele, Brazilian Rivaldo, Italian Alessandro Altobelli, have announced as attending. Many former Moroccan footballers will also be participating.

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Friday, November 06, 2015

Morocco Celebrates 40th Anniversary of Green March


Friday, November 6, is a special day for Moroccans. Daily newspapers across the country are unanimous in stressing the renewed mobilisation of the king and people to not only defend but also continue the development of the Moroccan Sahara
The Green March was a popular march of enormous proportions. On November 6, 1975, approximately 350,000 unarmed Moroccans converged on the city of Tarfaya in southern Morocco and waited for a signal from King Hassan II to cross into the region of Sakiya Lhmra. They brandished Moroccan flags and Qur'an; banners calling for the return of the Moroccan Sahara, photographs of the King and the Qur'an; the colour green for the march's name was intended as a symbol of Islam. As the marchers reached the border, the Spanish Armed Forces backed down and Spanish troops also cleared some previously mined zones.


Today Morocco's newspapers point out that the visit of King Mohammed VI to the Sahara marks the beginning of a new march for the development of the Saharan provinces.  Al Alam,  an Arabic-language paper, says ,"The country's advanced regionalisation is a democratic response from Morocco to the desperate attempts of those who want to challenge its historical and legitimate right to its southern provinces,"

Another of the Arabic language papers, Al Ittihad Al Ichtiraki, gave coverage of the Green March in 1975, which mobilised 350,000 Moroccans to march to recover the Saharan provinces armed only the "weapon" of the Holy Qur'an and olive branches. The paper went on to say that the new challenge is to establish and restore democracy and development for the benefit of the entire population of the Moroccan Sahara.

The same tone is voiced in the columns of Al Massae which devoted four pages under the headline "The Sahara issue ..." They also examined the visit of King Mohammed VI this Friday, to Laayoune and then to several other southern provinces.

A visit that, according to Al Massae, will increase the administrative regionalisation of the Sahara before the implementation of the autonomy plan for the population which will grant broad powers for Saharan self-management within the framework of Moroccan sovereignty.

The North Africa Post (on line) says: "There are very few events in the history of a country that transcend time and generations to remain vivid in the memory of all, old and young, there are few events that bear a historical grandeur and a sense of destiny and belonging. Morocco has such an event. That was the Green March, the unprecedented march, both symbolic and popular, of 350,000 Moroccans who walked hundreds of kilometres to peacefully recover a part of their country, the Western Sahara, which was under Spanish dominion."
No shots were fired, not a single drop of blood was shed and Morocco retrieved its Sahara. That was in 1975.
The North Africa Post concludes, "The centuries-old historical, geographical, and ethnical ties that existed between the Sahara and Northern Morocco that were broken by colonialism for decades were stitched again thanks to the genius idea of the late king Hassan II, the architect of the epic, who thought out and planned every detail of the March".



Anniversary pardons

As the country celebrates, Mohammed VI has pardoned hundreds of Moroccans from the Sahara and forty Salafists.

The total number pardoned is 4215 people who were serving sentences in different prisons of the kingdom.

According to a Ministry of Justice and Freedoms press release, 3539 prisoners have had the remainder of their sentences cut and been released. Among the pardoned prisoners are 69 people released on humanitarian grounds and 561 others who have gained a degree or further education.

A further 639 detainees have benefited from remission including 218 from the Moroccan Sahara and 421 detainees who graduated or who are studying or training.

The Department of Justice says that 37 Salafist prisoners held on terrorism charges but who have shown their willingness to reintegrate into society and to renounce violence, have been released.

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Saturday, October 17, 2015

40th Anniversary of the Call for the "Green March"


Yesterday, October 16th, was the 40th anniversary of the day that the country's King called for an event which became Morocco's famous Green March

The announcement back in 1975 by the late Hassan II of the Green March resulted in an event which became an important part of Morocco's contemporary history by enabling Morocco to recover its southern provinces. It came after the confirmation by the Court of Justice in The Hague of the existence of Morocco's legal ties to the Sahara.

In its opinion, dated 16 October, the Court of Justice ruled that the Sahara has never been "terra nullius," and that there were legal ties between the territory and the Kingdom of Morocco. On the same day Hassan II decided to call for the organisation of a peaceful Green March in early November.


Citizens responded on November 6th with the participation of 350,000 Moroccans 10% of whom were women. Forty years after the Green March, Morocco will again celebrate the return of the Southern provinces.

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Thursday, August 06, 2015

The Moroccan Fennec - The Smallest Fox


Rarely seen, the fennec fox or fennec (Vulpes zerda) is a small nocturnal fox found in the Moroccan Sahara. Its most distinctive feature is its unusually large ears, which apart from hearing, also serve to dissipate heat

The fennec is usually nocturnal, but sometimes moves during the day in very hot weather

Its name comes from the Arabic word فنك (fanak), which means fox, and the species name zerda comes from the Greek word xeros which means dry, referring to the fox's habitat.

The fennec is the smallest species of canid in the world. Its coat, ears, and kidney functions have adapted to high-temperature, low-water, desert environments. In addition, its hearing is sensitive enough to hear prey moving underground. It mainly eats insects, small mammals, and birds.


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Sunday, November 03, 2013

Two Public Holidays in Morocco This Coming Week


If you are visiting Morocco during the coming week, you need to be aware of two public holidays which will effect banks and many businesses. It is not unknown for ATM (cash machines) to run out of funds, so check you have cash on hand

Tuesday the 5th of November is the Islamic New Year - Year 1435 in the Islamic calendar. The event is also known as al Hijri.


Wednesday the 6th is a secular holiday - the Anniversary of the Green March

The struggle between Morocco and Spain over the return of the Sahara resulted in Hassan II calling for the people of Morocco to respond and in November 1975 the “Green March” of 350,000 unarmed Moroccans into the territory demonstrated popular support for its return.

The event is commemorated on the reverse side of the 100 dirham note

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Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Moroccan News Briefs #95



Gabonese President in Morocco

President of the Gabonese Republic, Haj Ali Bongo Ondimba and his wife Sylvia Bongo, arrived in Fez on Monday ahead of a visit the opening of the 6th edition of the foundations of Agriculture exhibition in Meknes. His Majesty King Mohammed VI presided over the opening ceremony on Tuesday.

HM The King and the President 

During the ceremony, the Minister of Agriculture and Maritime Fisheries, Aziz Akhannouch, gave a speech  in which he presented the results of the plan "Green Morocco" and laid out the future development paths for Moroccan agriculture. The minister pointed out that the agricultural gross domestic product recorded during the period 2008-2012 showed an increase of nearly 32% compared to the period 2005-2007.

While the president of Gabon is visiting the agricultural show in Meknes, Princess Lalla Salma and the First Lady of Gabon visited the Oncology Hospital CHU Hassan II in Fez. HRH Princess Lalla Salma, Chairwoman of the Lalla Salma-Prevention Foundation for cancer treatment, accompanied  Sylvia Bongo.

The hospital serves a population of over three million inhabitants of the Fès-Boulemane region and other regions of the North and East of the Kingdom. With a medical oncology, a nuclear medicine department and one radiotherapy department, the hospital has a medical staff of 15 specialist doctors, 45 nurses and five physiotherapists. It focuses on the medical care of cancer patients using chemotherapy, hormonal therapies, immunotherapies and palliative care.


Morocco Cancels "War Games"

Morocco has cancelled its annual military exercises with the United States after the Obama administration supported adding human rights monitoring to the U.N. mission to the disputed Western Sahara territory, U.S. officials said.

African Lion exercise in 2012

The 13th annual "African Lion" exercise — involving 1,400 U.S. servicemen and 900 Moroccan troops — had been set to start Wednesday with many personnel already in place and international observers invited.

The U.S. officials spoke on condition of anonymity because there has not yet been a formal announcement of the cancellation. Morocco's government spokesman declined to comment.

Mustapha Khalfi, the spokesman who doubles as the minister of communication, did summon journalists on Tuesday to express his government's anger over initiatives to broaden the U.N. mission's mandate to include human rights monitoring.

"It is an attack on the national sovereignty of Morocco and will have negative consequences on the stability of the whole region," he warned. "We count on the wisdom of the members of the Security Council to avoid such initiatives."

"Morocco rejects any proposals to expand the mandate of the MINUS or establish an alternative international mechanism for monitoring human rights in the southern provinces," Moroccan Foreign Minister Saad Dine El Otmani said on yesterday.

The manoeuvres have been a part of an annual joint exercise carried out since the 1990s.

NOTE: Also see the opinion piece at the end of this post for more background


Weather warning

The unusual amount of wind in Fez over the last few days may well be advanced warning of some bad weather. Violent rainstorms have been predicted for Morocco's western Mediterranean region. According to the weather channel heavy rains and thunderstorms are possible until Friday. The North East of Morocco will be most threatened along with northern Algeria and a large part of the Spanish coast areas.It is predicted that if the rains arrive they could be as heavy as 150 mm of rain in a few hours. A short lull is expected on Friday. Europe will be affected in turn by these disturbances with dropping temperatures.


The Moroccan economy grew by 4.8% in the first quarter of 2013

Morocco has recorded economic growth of 4.8% for the first quarter of 2013 against 2.7% in the first quarter of 2012, according to a statement of the Planning High Commissioner to Plan. This result highlights an agricultural activity enhanced by abundant rainfall, well distributed during the winter and spring period and noted a slight improvement in industrial activity. However, household consumption would have posted a smaller increase over the same period, estimated at 2.8% against 4.8% last year, due to a rise in consumer prices.


More migrant deaths

Eleven migrants trying to reach Europe died after their boat capsized off the north coast of Morocco, medical sources and a human rights group said on Wednesday.

Of the 34 people travelling in the boat, reached up by the Moroccan navy at midday on Tuesday, two children, three women and six men died, and another 12 were hospitalised, a doctor in the coastal town of Hoceima reported. All but one of the victims drowned, the other dying while being transported to Hoceima hospital, according to Faisal Oussard, local representative for the Moroccan Association of Human Rights.

They were all sub-Saharan migrants but their nationalities were not known.

Oussard said the boat capsized nine kilometres (six miles) off Hoceima, having set off from Nador, 130 kilometres to the east, either headed for the north African Spanish enclave of Melilla, or mainland Spain. The sea was calm when the accident took place, but the boat, a rigid inflatable, or RIB, was far too small for the number of people it was carrying, he added.

The condition of those those hospitalised in Hoceima and the fate of the 11 people who escaped without injury were not known.

The Moroccan authorities frequently expel sub-Saharan migrants across the Algerian border, which is their main point of entry.

The tiny Spanish occupied enclaves of Ceuta and Melilla, perched on the coast of north Africa and both claimed by Morocco, are key launching pads for clandestine migration to Europe.

Melilla received 2,224 illegal immigrants last year, 262 more than in 2011, according to Spain's Interior Minister Jorge Fernandez Diaz. He blamed instability in Africa's Sahel region, and especially in Mali, for the rise in illegal immigrants trying to enter the territory.

Local associations estimate that Morocco was hosting between 20,000 and 25,000 migrants from sub-Saharan countries in 2012 hoping for access to Europe through Spain.


Solar boat in Morocco 

After last year's visit of the solar powered aircraft, Solar Impulse, now it is the turn of the Swiss boat "Tûranor Planet Solar" (Power of the Sun) to anchor Morocco. The largest solar boat in the world visited the Marina Bouregreg. The crew chose Rabat as a starting point for its second transatlantic crossing which will begin in May. At a press conference on April 18 at the Marina, Didier Rabo communication director at the University of Geneva, partner of the event, said that the expedition will collect measurements along the Gulf Stream, as ocean current that is of paramount importance in regulating the climate in the northern hemisphere.


MS Tûranor Planet Solar is the largest solar-powered boat in the world. The vessel was designed by LOMOcean Design, built by Knierim Yachtbau in Kiel, Germany and launched on 31 March 2010. In May 2012 it became the first ever solar electric vehicle to circumnavigate the globe.


Opinion -
W Lebed writes on the US Morocco News Board about the background to the US - Morocco war games fiasco
US-Morocco: The Blunder & The 200 Year Relationship

There are days when reality parodies better what the likes of Mark Burnett in Expedition Impossible can come up with. Take 1,400 U.S. military personnel, ship tons of heavy military equipment to Agadir and Marrakech, add more than 900 Moroccan RAF staff to the mix and invite 14 partner nations from NATO, but then as they are about to kick-start their pre-planned annual war games, blow the whistle and call the whole thing off because a clumsy US bureaucrat at the United Nations decided to put the kibosh, albeit briefly, on the longest peace and friendship treaty that the US have with a foreign power.

You could not make it up, really. That's what actually happened this week when Susan Rice hatched a plot supposedly on her own or more likely with the wink and nudge of some malevolent hand to undermine Moroccan sovereignty over Western Sahara.

The result is a hand grenade in the Moroccan royal palace that no one really anticipated even in the most far-fetched of Hollywood scenarios. That definitely got everybody's hackles up in Morocco from your average Omar and Nadia to the most seasoned diplomats. What's more upsetting is to see senior US security and military officials have eggs on their face in Agadir and Marrakech. And, believe me, it was not a pretty picture either. They were all left dashing left, right and centre wondering what on earth has possessed their Moroccan counterpart. Sunstroke. Definitely not.

The answer is to be found hidden in Susan Rice's drawer. Her draft document was a pernicious and malicious idea meant to remove bit by bit Morocco's authority over Western Sahara to satisfy the greed and voracity of the anti-Moroccan lobby, which operates in Washington and New York on behalf of the cack-handed but brutal military junta of Algeria.

Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman of Casablanca may possibly have applauded the ingenuity and creativity of these graceless co-conspirators. However, this gauche idea would definitely not have pleased a former US diplomat who runs the show at Rick's Cafe in Casablanca. Just imagine the pretty place packed with Russian spies, Iranian agents, North Korean loonies and Chinese businessmen plotting together to take over lock, stock and barrel the running of the show in this sensitive and strategic part of the world.

Western powers would rue the day a certain Susan Rice had been promoted above her station under Obama's administration. Of all the gin joints in all the towns in all the world, Susan Rice walks into the minefields of North Africa and the Middle East. Unprepared, unready, unaware and more significantly unsuspecting of the trap that the moustached and evil-minded generals of Algiers were laying for her.

Luckily, the wise men and women of the Obama administration in Washington who know the ins and outs of this tricky part of the world came alive in time and swept clean Rice's mess far away from the U.N. headquarters. Now is the time for the US military personnel to enjoy the golden beaches of Agadir where they can have some rest and relaxation, play football with the local kids and enjoy Moroccan hospitality despite the blues that befell them once they were told that what their commander in chief sent them to do was postponed to a later date.

The sages at the Pentagon know very well that Morocco is the only safe place in the whole Muslim world where their soldiers can walk, talk and interact with the local population without fear of being stabbed or murdered by some crazed person sent by a mad mullah, and more interestingly without staying inside some green zones or high fortification.

What's more, the wise heads of the Central Intelligence Agency are also well aware that Morocco is the only safe place in North Africa and the Middle East where their future intelligence officers can be sent to live with a local Muslim family to learn the language and culture of this troubled parts of the world.

Many a Peace Corps volunteers who spent time in Morocco working in projects for technological, agricultural and educational improvement are now in office across the MENA region serving their homeland with professional aplomb.

Let's hope for the sake of more than 200 years of US-Morocco peace and friendship a mediocre person is not allowed once again to blemish this pristine record. Amen!


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Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Moroccan News Briefs #87


Fes Festival  - Patti Smith to Headline


The organisers of the Fes Festival of World Sacred Music have just announced the great news that Patti Smith will be performing in Bab Al Makina for the closing concert on Sunday 15 June.

Patricia Lee "Patti" Smith (born December 30, 1946) is an American singer-songwriter, poet and visual artist, who became a highly influential component of the New York City punk rock movement with her 1975 debut album Horses.

Called the "Godmother of Punk", her work was a fusion of rock and poetry. Smith's most widely known song is "Because the Night", which was co-written with Bruce Springsteen and reached number 13 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in 1978.

In 2005, Patti Smith was named a Commander of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French Minister of Culture, and in 2007, she was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. On November 17, 2010, she won the National Book Award for her memoir Just Kids. She is also a recipient of the 2011 Polar Music Prize.


A reminder that the 19th edition of the Fes Festival of World Sacred Music will be held from 7 to 15 June is timely as, according to a number of accommodation owners in Fez, bookings are coming in already and finding a place to stay will become increasingly difficult.

Morocco's spiritual capital will celebrate the famous festival with the theme "Fez "Andalusian", organizers said on Tuesday night in Casablanca. This cultural event will this year celebrate the Andalusian culture that, for more than eight centuries has combined Amazigh (Berber), Arab, Iberian, Roman and Visigoth together in a crucible of cultures of East and West, said the president of the Spirit of Fes Foundation, Mohamed Kabbaj. This festival, he said is the the highlight of the work of the Spirit of Fes Foundation, which works to promote the cultural heritage and to promote the image of Fez, nationally and internationally, as a center of peace, dialogue and creativity, at he added.

This year will also mark the millennium of the creation of the Kingdom of Granada, said Director General of the Foundation, Faouzi Skali, highlighting again that this festival is a tribute to the Andalusian culture.

Amazigh language celebrates International Day

Next Thursday the  Royal Institute of Amazigh Culture (IRCAM) celebrates the International Day of Mother Language (IMLD), under the slogan "the book, a pillar of the education in the teaching of the mother tongue."

As part of the celebrations IRCAM is organising a scientific seminar and other cultural activities, in collaboration with the UNESCO office in Rabat, the Ministry of Culture and the Faculty of Education Institute. The activities will include a presentation on "Amazigh language: standardization, education and new technologies" and another on "Amazigh heritage and not material", which aims to promote culture as a whole.

The International Day of the Mother Language was proclaimed by the General Conference of UNESCO in 1999 to promote the some 7,000 languages ​​in the world, and as an opportunity for effective mobilization in favour of linguistic diversity and multilingualism.

An embarrassing turbulence strikes Air France and the Palace

An strange incident that took place on December 5th has created a ripples in both France and Morocco. On that day an Air France pilot made a joke about the delay in taking off. To justify a delay, the pilot said it was due to the presence of a plane belonging to the Moroccan king being ahead of them. “The control tower won’t let me take off until His Majesty the King of Morocco has finished relaxing in the VIP lounge,” he said, according to news reports.

The pilot of the Casablanca-Paris flight flight AF2497 is reported to have added, “Those passengers who want to complain and get their tickets reimbursed can do so by writing to King Mohammed VI, the Royal Palace, Rabat.”

Some passengers were not amused, and a group of the Moroccan travellers made an official complaint to Air France,  accusing the airline of  “the most disgraceful example of a certain superiority complex” inherited from the colonial era.

Air France CEO Alexandre de Juniac sent a letter to the group apologising for the December 5 incident, adding that the pilot in question “would be sanctioned” for the offence.

Unfortunately for Air France, the apology has not closed the book on the story, and the passengers have decided to take their complaint to court and to ask for the airline to hand over the cockpit recording of the incident when Air France appears in court in Bobigny, Seine-Saint-Denis on the 25th of February.

Now it emerges that the Palace and HM King are embarrassed by the charges against Air France. According to L'Express "HM King Mohammed VI, who learned the business from the press, took care to distance himself" from this case. The filing of the complaint would be "especially felt awkward to the entourage of the ruler coming as it does before an official visit by François Hollande," says the French newspaper.

"France is on the side of Morocco" - Luc Chatel

The Sahara issue came to the fore in remarks made this week by the President of France Morocco Friendship Group of the French National Assembly, Luc Chatel. "France is on the side of Morocco" in the Sahara issue, he said in Rabat, He went on to describe the Franco-Moroccan relationship as "solid and historical, based on a political and economic partnership."

"France has shown that for many years it supports Morocco on many issues especially the Sahara" added Mr. Chatel, after an interview with the Minister of Foreign Affairs and Cooperation, Saad El Dine Otmani.

Mr. Chatel has also welcomed the conduct of reforms undertaken by Morocco as well as parliamentary diplomacy between the two countries, adding that "parliamentarians have a role to play in sharing good practices and experiences between our countries." In a similar statement, Mr. El Otmani emphasized the strategic relations between the two countries that are rooted in time, declaring its determination to work to further improve the benefit of both countries.

Casablanca - Africa's third top destination


Casablanca has long been Morocco's economic capital but now it is emerging as a major tourist destination. A report released this week by a network of tourism professionals in South Africa claims Casablanca as the third top African destination after the top two -  Cape Town and Durban in 2012. Both these cities attracted more than two million tourists, said the report. These African cities offer many places for conferences, fairs and quality accommodation, the report says, noting that among the cities which also benefited from tourism are particularly Accra, Nairobi, Dakar, Kampala, Lagos, Maputo, Cairo and Tunis. The report also claims that foreign tourists, who were accustomed to spend their holidays in the cities especially in Europe, have started to visit African cities that have made ​​great strides in diversifying their tourism product.

Fatality in Agadir

Mystery surrounds the death of a French woman found dead in her apartment in Agadir on Tuesday. Police officers broke into the woman's apartment to find her body. Initial reports say that it appears she died of electric shock. Very little information has been released but it is believed that the woman was 33, divorced and the mother of four Moroccan children.  Civil protection and forensic units have visited the scene and opened an investigation to determine the circumstances of the death.

Cinema tonight in Fez

Thanks to the French Institute in Fez, the French movie All That Glitters will screen tonight, Wednesday, February 20, at 1900 in Rex Cinema.

Cinéma "Tout ce qui brille" ce soir


Details
Members and students: 10 dh Non-members: 20 dh
Directed by Hervé Mimran and Géraldine Nakache
Nationality: France
Duration 1:40 min
Year 2009
Leila Bekhti with Geraldine Nakache, Virginie Ledoyen, Linh-Dan Pham, Simon Buret, Audrey Lamy, Daniel Cohen and Manu Payet
César 2011 for Best Female Newcomer young

Leila Bekhti Ely and Lila have known each other since childhood and share everything together and dream of another life. They live in the same suburb, ten minutes from Paris. Things change... starting with small shenanigans and then big lies. They will try to enter a world that is not theirs and where everything seems possible ...

Opinion - Sexual Harassment in Morocco

Nidal Chebbak, writing for Morocco World News, takes a look at an issue that is being hotly debated in Morocco. Here is an extract and a link to the full article.

Sexual harassment has been a controversial issue in Morocco for a very long time and it still is. Different people have different opinions about the issue; some blame women for being too loose and others blame men for being unable to control and behave themselves.

As a Moroccan girl, I can very much relate to this issue as any other Moroccan girl. As I believe, every Moroccan girl/ woman is harassed every time she goes out regardless of her age, shape, color, ethnicity, background… and no matter what she wears, even if she puts on potato bags. Any girl who says the opposite is living in denial because that’s the reality we deal with every day.

Sexual harassment can vary through the constant gazes that checks every inch of the girl’s body from head to toe, the harassing words coming from every corner, the following -or as I’d prefer to call it “the tireless stalking”-, the insistence to get the girl to talk, then it can move too far to the undesired touching of her body.

Men would argue that it’s the women who give way to men to sexually harass them in the streets, especially when they aren’t wearing “decent clothes”. Many men feel that they have the right to harass a woman who is wearing revealing clothes and that this type of clothes is actually an open invitation for harassment. This type of women is labeled as loose and immoral, even if they are not. After all, what’s the fine line between decent and indecent clothes for women? As far as I have experienced, seen and heard, no matter what a woman wears, she’s still going to be harassed at some point in her usual day.

I also think that this whole issue of “indecent clothes” is just a very weak and “loose” excuse for men to carry on their horrendous habits. We are a Muslim country where almost every Muslim Moroccan prides everywhere about being a Muslim (of course, in words but rarely in practice) but still we find these horrible acts that are condemned by our religion. In Surat an-Nur, the Almighty Allah states: “Tell the believing men to lower their gaze and guard their modesty. That is purer for them, verily Allah is All-Aware of what they do.” (24:30). Isn’t this a verse where the Almighty Allah asks men to lower their gaze and guard their modesty? Did He by any means in this verse or in any other verse state that, well if women aren’t dressing decent enough then you shall harass them? No, He didn’t. Muslim men take pride in being Muslim, but as long as they don’t abide by this and other verses, their pride amounts to bigotry.

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Thursday, November 01, 2012

November Dates to Remember in Morocco


The famous Green March

If you are visiting Morocco in November, then make a note of a couple of very important dates. This month, all Morocco commemorates two of the most significant dates in the country's history over the last century.

November 6th

On November 6, the day of the Green March is the anniversary of peaceful deployment in 1975 of 350,000 civilians who marched to recover the territory of Morocco's Western Sahara that had been previously occupied by Spain.

The Green March was a strategic mass demonstration in November 1975, coordinated by the Moroccan government. During this march 350,000 Moroccans converged on the city of Tarfaya in southern Morocco and waited for a signal from King Hassan II to cross into Western Sahara. They brandished Moroccan flags, U.S.A. flags, Saudi Arabia flags & Jordan flags; banners calling for the “return of the Moroccan Sahara.” The color green for the march’s name was intended as a symbol of Islam. The Green March is considered an important symbol of Moroccan nationalism and liberation from colonialism.


November 18th

Another important date, November 18, 1955, the day the late king Mohammed V of Morocco announced to the people the end of the period of the French protectorate.

After the royal family returned to Morocco from exile in Madagascar on November 18, 1955, the late king Mohammed V announced the end of the French protectorate and the advent of the era of freedom and independence.

Moroccans have paid an expensive price for their independence that was gained after enormous sacrifices and a long struggle that left scores of martyrs. They managed to foil France's attempt in 1930 to impose the "Berber Dahir," that aimed to sow division between Arabs and Berbers, as well as the Spanish occupiers endeavor in 1946 to impose on inhabitants of Ait-Baamrane and the neighboring tribes the Spanish nationality to reinforce its colonizing power.

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Friday, August 31, 2012

Moroccan News Briefs #70


Free Ceuta (Sebta) and Mililla activists detained

Moroccan activist make their statement 

Four Moroccan activists from the Committee to Free Ceuta (Sebta) and Melilla were briefly detained at dawn on Wednesday this week after trying to occupy the Penon de Velez de la Gomera fortress off the Moroccan coast. Both Ceuta and Melilla are considered by Moroccans as their territory.

A total of seven activists reached the fortress, on a peninsula 130 kilometers west of Melilla. Arriving on foot at 6.30am, they tried to place flags from their movement. Stopped by Spanish military border police, three activists fled while the other four were questioned, identified and then released, said a Spanish enclave government delegate, El Berkani.

Committee activists have made several attempts to occupy Spanish-occupied rock fortresses recently, El Berkani said. In 2002, the landing of Moroccan troops on Spain's Perejl Island in the Strait of Gibraltar caused a diplomatic incident between the two countries.


The Casablanca tramway - nearing completion


The construction work on the first tramway in Casablanca is nearly completed with October the 15th set as the date for test driving trains in actual traffic conditions and checking all equipment. The October  date is nearly two months before the expected commissioning of the giant urban development.

Work on the railway platforms is on schedule with finishing touches underway with full completion expected on September 10.

The 22 km of overhead contact lines are in place and 15 km has already been electrified.

The control centre of the operation will initially run 37 trains, but capacity has been built into the system to accommodate 49 trains and in anticipation of new line extensions or an increase in the number of trains.

The first tramway line, which crosses the city from east to west covers a distance of 30 km, linking the main areas of the city include 48 stations and stops travelers. Each train, with a length of 65 m, can accommodate 600 passengers with 100 seats, an expected number of 250,000 travelers daily via a fleet of 37 trains.

To give a new visual identity, it is also planned the construction of two large squares - UN and Casa Voyageurs and the planting of 2,000 trees. In all, some 90 hectares of the city of Casablanca which will be fully refurbished.


"Human Rights" delegation criticised

Human rights observers held meetings with tribal leaders, peacekeepers and Moroccan officials on Monday as they wrapped up a visit to the Morocco's Western Sahara.

Their visit comes amid a row between the United Nations and Rabat, which has demanded the replacement of new UN peace envoy Christopher Ross, whom it accuses of "bias" in efforts to resolve the status of the territory.

The delegation, led by Kerry Kennedy, of the Robert F Kennedy Centre for Justice and Human Rights, and Mary Lawlor, director of rights group Front Line Defenders, held morning meetings with tribal leaders and the region's governor, an AFP reporter said.

In the afternoon, the group visited the headquarters of the UN peacekeeping mission.

On Sunday, the delegation held a closed meeting at their hotel with Sahrawi pro-independence groups, who repeated their demands to see the mandate of the peacekeeping mission extended to cover human rights. It also met pro-Moroccan groups.

However there has been widespread cynicism about the biased nature of the trip. Richard Miniter, writing for an on-line journal criticised "...chumming around with a group credibly linked to terrorists who are at war with the United States, and consorting with drug smugglers who are essentially at war with all civilized peoples."

Morocco is a frontline state in America’s war against “Al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb” (AQIM), a branch of the late Osama bin Laden’s terror network. This is the group that plotted to bomb the U.S. Embassy in Bamako, Mali. It schemed to kidnap drivers on the Paris-Dakar road race. It has held for ransom more than a score of Europeans.

AQIM also plots to kidnap or kill American diplomats all across North Africa. Morocco is a constitutional monarchy with an elected government, so undermining it hurts a vital U.S. ally in both the war on terror and the war on drugs.

Miniter claims that both the terrorists and the drug lords have been repeatedly linked to the Polisario Front — the same anti-Moroccan rebel group that hosted the Kennedy women.

Miniter is scathing about the visit saying "Two scions of the Kennedy clan went to Morocco and came away with a breathless tale of police brutality against separatists. The problem? The separatists represent the Polisario Front, a brutal rebel group linked to al-Qaida and drug smugglers. Their first-hand account, which was published by The Huffington Post, doesn’t mention that their radical chic tour continued to the Polisario Front’s remote Saharan camps in Southern Algeria, where the rebels used the naïve Kennedy women for all the propaganda value they could wring out of them." Read the full article here

A source within the Moroccan government, not authorized to speak on the record but with direct knowledge of the circumstances surrounding Kennedy's visit, expressed concern for the peace process. "Kennedy and her team, after asking for Moroccan assistance to organize the trip, refused to meet with anyone not supportive of the Polisario." Further, the official was adamant that the Moroccan government communicated to Kennedy and the RFK Center they were "welcome here (Morocco,) could stay as long as they want, and we are pleased to arrange meetings with Moroccans and Sahrawis with differing views than those within the Polisario."

Inquest into couple's deaths in Morocco

A joint inquest into the deaths of a couple from Worcestershire killed in separate falls while on holiday in Morocco is due to take place today. Roger and Mathilde Lamb, from Pensham near Pershore, were with their four sons in the tourist resort of Essaouira last August when they died in separate incidents.

Mrs Lamb, who was 43, is believed to have fallen from the apartment her family were staying in on August 17. She died the next day.  Mr Lamb, who was 47, died after falling from a separate building a few days later.

Mechanisation gives Argan oil a boost

A Moroccan university professor’s interest in the economic preservation of the declining Argan tree has resulted in women harvesting the tree’s valuable oil increasing their income by more than ten times.


Zoubida Charrouf (pictured above), a professor at Mohamed V. University in Morocco, initially developed an interest in the tree and its oil for conservation reasons, but has since improved the extraction of oil by establishing processing cooperatives – such as the Ajddigue and Taitmatine cooperatives – run entirely by local women. This commercialisation of Argan oil has boosted business in the cooperatives and emancipated the women by offering them a meaningful livelihood. Charrouf says that Argan Oil “should readily find a place of choice amid the most profitable oils for human health”. Celebrities as diverse as Sophie Dahl, model and writer, and Heston Blumenthal, one of Britain’s leading chefs, are fans.

The commercialisation was achieved by mechanising some of the tedious production tasks, such as grinding the nuts and pressing the oil. This sped up the operation and also improved the quality of the oil, doubled its shelf life, and reduced waste. Membership in the cooperatives now ranges from 35 to 40 women, who now earn about $8.60 a day, an increase of more than ten times from when the projects began in 1997. Argan oil is now a high value niche product on the international market, and what began as a cottage industry could now provide more employment to Moroccan women.

”At the time [the project started], we were losing more than 600 hectares of Argan forest each year,” says Charrouf. “But we also wanted to convert this ecological problem into an economic opportunity. I knocked at several doors, but no one believed in my project. Now Argan oil is known around the world.” The economic opportunity that Charrouf uncovered for Moroccan women is now being supported with grants from the Moroccan government and the European Union.

“Being part of the cooperative freed me from tedious domestic work in people’s homes,” said one member of the Taitmatine cooperative. “Now I’m learning to read and write and I’ve learned how to ensure the quality of the Argan kernels. The cooperative has made me more independent. I’ve been able to visit other cooperatives in other provinces. I’ve seen how girls and women like me have been able to shape their own destiny and move ahead to develop their cooperatives.”


The hunt for oil in Morocco heats up

Morocco is becoming an increasingly attractive prospect for International Oil Companies (IOCs) looking for new exploration opportunities to add to their portfolios .With one of the most attractive tax regimes in the world and political stability unlike many of its neighbours, companies like Cairn are moving into Morocco.

Cairn will buy 50 percent of the Foum Draa blocks in Morocco, a third purchase this year after acquiring North Sea explorers Agora Oil & Gas AS and Nautical Petroleum Plc. After investing nearly US$ 1 billion in Greenland and still looking for results Cairn needs to diversify its exploration efforts in new areas and Morocco and the Mediterranean fits the bill. Cairn has sold most of its Indian holdings and thus has money to invest.

Much of Morocco remains unexplored and although there have not been significant finds yet the 3 D seismic surveys and geographical data are promising , particularly for offshore. The Edinburgh-based Cairn will pay US$ 60 million for fifty percent stake in a license shared with a number of small companies at Foum Draa block located in the western offshore of Agadir.

The current license holders San Leon, Serica and Longreach will hold interests of 14.2 percent, 8.3 per cent and 2.5 percent respectively, while the Office National des Hydrocarbures et des Mines (ONHYM) will hold 25 per cent.

Recent news flow from Morocco is a “very positive indicator” for Tangiers Petroleum which has significant acreage in the sought-after stretch of coastal north-west Africa, according to City broker Old Park Lane.Genel Energy has farmed into the Sidi Moussa block, and its investment together with Cairns amounts to deals worth in excess of $100 million and committments to drill two wells in the area.

Morocco has become a honey-pot for the ambitious mid and large-cap exploration groups as the geological understanding of coastal West Africa has increased.

Alongside Genel and Cairn, are Total , Repsol , Anadarko and Kosmos which are all active in the waters of the country’s coast.

Compared with its near neighbours Morocco is still largely under-explored, although this is changing with the latest influx of oil companies.

Moroccan Sufi expert dies

The specialist on Moroccan Sufism, Zakia Zouanat, died this week.



Zakia Zouanat Anthropologist, specialist of Moroccan Sufism and author of an important work on the extensions of this heritage in the world, died Thursday night at the age of 55, following a long illness.

Zouanat, who was a researcher at the Institute of African Studies of the Mohammed V University in Rabat, is particularly known for her work on the Sufi heritage aspects of Morocco and its influence around the world. Her seminal work on this subject is "The Kingdom of the Saints" (le Royaume des Saints).


"In the era of globalization the soul is desperate. How does one give to the other if one does not know oneself; if one has not preserved what we value most, our identity? Sufism is the central part of the Moroccan identity!"  Zakia Zouanat


The Germans are coming

Lufthansa launches new flights to Marrakech. September 1, 2012 will see the start of flights to Marrakech from Berlin and Dusseldorf, with two weekly frequencies. These air links will meet the ambitions of Morocco in relation to the German market, which in 2011 accounted for 4% of the tourist activity in Marrakech, with arrivals and overnight stays exceeding 70,000 and 165,000 nights respectively. Morocco has set a goal of doubling the number of German tourists in 2020, from 200,000 to 400,000 tourists per year.

Forest fires threaten rosemary plantings

Between January and this week, 326 forest fires have occurred in Morocco, according to figures from the Office for Water and Forests and the Fight against Desertification (HCEFLD). 3406 hectares of vegetation were destroyed, the equivalent of 3,400 football fields went up in smoke. The East is the region most affected by the fires. Near Nador, Berkane and Taourirt, 1866 hectares of vegetation burned in the latest fire. Commercial rosemary is almost certain to sustain damage.


OPINION

Morocco Is on the Path to Change

Hicham Ben Abdallah el Alaoui is a consulting professor at Stanford University's Center for Democracy Development and the Rule of Law, and is the president of the Moulay Hicham Foundation. He is a cousin of King Mohammed VI of Morocco and third in line for the throne. He wrote this piece for the New York Times

The Arab monarchies have survived the turmoil in the Middle East for several reasons. First, the monarchic institution remains deeply linked to national identity in many of these countries because of anticolonial struggle and the historical importance of the institution itself. Second, monarchies have traditionally arbitrated conflicts between different groups and classes, acting as benevolent caretakers of society. They have also allowed other institutions, like parliaments, to represent the people, thus staying above the political fray.

Like Jordan, Morocco is trying to satisfy its citizens by liberalizing instead of democraticizing.

These factors have earned Arab monarchs a respite from the wave that swept away regimes in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya and possibly Yemen, but the respite will not last forever.

In the Gulf, enormous oil revenue has permitted monarchies to initiate new welfare and development programs to deflect public pressure. Geopolitics matter too: it has become clear that Saudi Arabia will not permit the crisis in Bahrain to truly threaten the existence of its monarchy. Likewise, at the international level, the United States and the European Union have little desire to encourage any more instability in this economically vital area.

The issue of monarchical survival has become inextricably entangled with the dynamics of Sunni-Shiite sectarian tension, which pits Iran against the Arab Gulf kingdoms. This discourse has grown hegemonic: not just the monarchies but also oppositionists have internalized these fears, blunting the demand for political reform.

Morocco and Jordan — the two oil-poor monarchies — are trying to satisfy their citizens by liberalizing instead of democratizing. They have turned to controlled political openings cloaked in the language of freedom but intended to perpetuate the status quo. Limited constitutional reforms, tolerance of more opposition and new parliamentary elections are welcome steps, but such measures do not devolve power away from the palace.

And such policies cannot indefinitely quiet the restive middle classes, who are no longer satisfied with constrained pluralism and demand genuine participation. What they desire is not revolution but reformation toward constitutional monarchy, a new system of governance that embodies the spirit of democracy while retaining the historical role of monarchism in these societies. The path to change may be uneven, and sometimes even chaotic, but it has begun.

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Saturday, May 19, 2012

Morocco Rejects UN Sahara Envoy




Morocco has decided to withdraw its confidence in the personal envoy of the U.N. Secretary-General for the Sahara, Christopher Ross. 



Christopher Ross (pictured above) was a former United States Ambassador to Algeria and Syria. On January 7, 2009 he was appointed to be the new UN envoy to the Sahara.

The Moroccan government asked the U.N. Secretary-General to take "appropriate decisions" to push the negotiating process on the Sahara issue forward, and reiterated its commitment to the Security Council Resolutions' efforts to negotiate in order to achieve a lasting and mutually acceptable political solution.

The statement was read out by the Communications Minister, and government spokesman, Mustapha El Khalfi at a press briefing following the cabinet meeting. El Khalfi said the cabinet followed a presentation by the Foreign Minister on the current developments in the Moroccan Sahara issue and the results of his recent visits to some countries and to the headquarters of the United Nations.

"Christopher Ross, in whom Morocco has withdrawn Thursday its confidence, has not complied with the requirements of impartiality that a mediator must maintain," -  El Hassane Boukantar

Morocco, he said, presented to the U.N. Secretary-General the conclusions of its assessment of the developments in the Moroccan Sahara issue with regard to three aspects: the missteps identified in the latest report of the U.N. Secretary-General on the Sahara, the decline of the negotiation process which lacks any prospects or opportunities for progress, and finally the paradoxes noted in the actions of the personal envoy of the U.N. Secretary-General, Christopher Ross, marked by his renunciation of the founding principles of negotiations as defined by the Security Council resolutions.

"The personal envoy of the U.N. Secretary-General for the Sahara, Christopher Ross, in whom Morocco has withdrawn Thursday its confidence, has not complied with the requirements of impartiality that a mediator must maintain," said Moroccan professor El Hassane Boukantar.

"We found, in the latest UN report on the Sahara, that some questions were raised with the intent to misrepresent the position of Morocco and to push some members of the Security Council to give up the positive attitude adopted by the Council since 2007, the date of the presentation by Morocco of autonomy proposal, qualified as credible," said Professor Boukantar in a statement to news agency MAP.

He added that the Security Council considers Morocco as a credible partner in the search for a settlement to the Sahara issue, adding that all U.N. representatives should take this into account and "not to put Morocco on the same footing as other parties which seek to gain time."

France reiterated on Friday its support for the Moroccan autonomy plan, after Morocco’s decision to withdraw its confidence in the UNSG personal envoy for the Sahara Christopher Ross, calling for a “swift settlement of the dispute”.

France reiterates its support for the Moroccan autonomy plan, which is the only realistic proposal on the table of negotiations and which constitutes a serious and credible basis for a solution brokered by the U.N. Spokesperson of the French Foreign Ministry, Bernard Valero said.

France took note of Morocco’s decision to withdraw its confidence in the UNSG personal envoy for the Sahara Christopher Ross and is calling for a swift settlement for the dispute, which takes account of all the parties’ legitimate concerns, he said at a press briefing, the first under the new socialist government.

Valero recalled France’s support for the search for a political solution to the Sahara issue, under the aegis of the U.N. in accordance with UNSC resolutions.

ROSS IN LIMBO


After Morocco's rejection, Christopher Ross has called off plans to carry out his first official trip to the disputed territory, the UN said Friday after Morocco launched a strong attack on him.

"There are no plans for Mr Ross to travel to the region at this time," a UN spokesman, Farhan Haq, told reporters.

Ross announced at the end of the last UN-brokered informal talks between Morocco and the Polisario Front guerrillas in March that he would go to the region, including Sahara, in mid-May. Ross has yet to visit the Moroccan-controlled territory.

While no fixed dates had been organised, the trip has been made untenable by Morocco's statement on Thursday that it had lost confidence in Ross who was  "unbalanced and biased."


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Thursday, February 16, 2012

Controversial Fishing and Farming Pact Signed

Morocco has cause to celebrate the signing in Strasbourg on Thursday of the controversial fishing and farming accord with the European Union. The issue has been divisive, with strong opposition from European farmers as well as some environmental groups. Critics say it will hurt small family farms in France, Spain and Morocco and swing the economic advantages towards the large European food conglomerates

the European Parliament will revisit the vetoed fishing agreement


The European Parliament approved the new fishing and farming accord with Morocco by 369 to 225 votes. It is intended that the new agreement will reduce customs costs and boost trade across the Mediterranean.

Supporters of the accord maintain that it will allow European access to a key market and show European support for Morocco as it undertakes democratic reforms prompted by the Arab Spring uprisings.

The win for Morocco comes in the wake of their embarrassing defeat on the proposed extension of the European Union-Morocco “agreement on fishing”. The resolution to scrap the EU-Morocco fisheries deal was approved on the 14th December, 2011 with 326 votes for, 296 votes against and 58 abstentions.

The fishing fleet in Agadir


However, despite last year's setback, two days ago all the countries of the European Union formally approved to authorize the Commissioner for Fisheries, Maria Damanaki, to resume contacts with Morocco and to sign a new fishing agreement, to replace that vetoed by the European Parliament last year after sustained social media pressure from supporters of the Algerian backed Polisario rebels.

The decision of the 27 member states does not expressly mention the Sahara or Polisario, references to which the governments of Spain and France opposed. The parliament's approval is now needed for it to be valid.

 According to European sources consulted by Europa Press Agency, the measure provides a "geographical description" of the regions covered by the agreement.and that should benefit from the advantages it offers. Specifically, the text mentions 'south 27° 40'N' The Polisario have been attempting to claim that Morocco is exploiting its resources and claims to be excluded from any agreement with Morocco.

On this occasion, Sweden, Finland, United Kingdom and the Netherlands voted against the document because they argued that there is no express reference to the Sahara region. In light on the online activism by Polisario supporters, it is a timely reminder for Morocco that the inability of the Moroccan representatives to understand the importance and impacts of blogs, online activism, and “the internet diplomacy” can have very negative consequences.

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Monday, February 13, 2012

Morocco - Upcoming Events

There is plenty happening in Morocco over the next few weeks. So take out your diary and make some notes!

Moussem des Femmes Créatrices d'Assilah - the Festival of Creative Women in Asilah takes place again this year from March 1 to March 6.

Asilah is a fortified town on the northwest tip of the Atlantic coast of Morocco, about 31 km from Tangier. Its ramparts and gates remain fully intact. Its history dates back to 1500 B.C., when the Phoenicians used it as a base for trade. The Portuguese conquered the city in 1471, but John III later decided to abandon it because of an economic crisis in 1549. In 1692, the town was taken by the Moroccans under the leadership of Moulay Ismail. Asilah served then as a base for pirates in the 19th and 20th centuries.

Asilah waterfront 

The Festival of Creative Women (not to be confused with the Asilah Arts Festival in August) is always a good time to visit as the exhibitions and events add to the atmosphere. The emphasis of the festival is on supporting and promoting the artistic skills of rural and urban women in the Arab-Mediterranean nations. L’Association Marocaine des Créatrices Contemporarines created the festival to showcase the achievements of women and to encourage the artists to sell they artistic products nationally and internationally as an independent means of income. More details about this year's event when they become available.


The International Nomad Festival  (8, 9 and 10 March) was first staged in 2003  and is based in the small Moroccan village of M'hamid El Ghizlane, some 60 kilometres south of Zagora in the Draa Valley. This, the ninth edition of the festival, features dance, music, exhibitions, conferences and handicraft displays and draws international artists from France, Spain and Brazil. This year will feature a major exhibition of local produce and crafts of Morocco.

the festival is full of surprises

This is a great opportunity to take a different journey and find a new experience of the desert.

During these three days will be held roundtables, conferences and workshops related to the heritage of the region. Local artists, regional, national and international will join the festival and share their musical universe on two stages: one at 4 km north of El Ghizlane M'hamid in the dunes, the other south in the center of M'hamid.

For more information call (212) 662104793 or email clubnomades@gmail.com


The Maroc Classic



The 19th edition of the "MAROC CLASSIC - La Route du Coeur" is a rally run between march 17th and 24th, under the Honorary Chairmanship of His Royal Highness Prince Moulay Rachid and features (by invitation) historic cars and modern GTs. The rally is organised under the auspices of the Federation Royale Marocaine des Sports Automobiles (FRMSA).


Provisional Programme
Sunday, March 18th         LEG 1: RABAT – VOLUBILIS – FES (260 kms)
Monday, March 19th        LEG 2: FES – KENIFRA – BIN EL OUIDANE (390 kms)
Tuesday, March 20th        LEG 3: BIN EL OUIDANE – DEMNATE – OUARZAZATE (320 kms)
Wednesday, March 21st    LEG 4: OUARZAZATE – TAFRAOUTE – AGADIR (498 kms)
Thursday, March 22nd     LEG 5: AGADIR – TAROUDANNT - AGADIR (283 kms)
Friday, March 23rd          LEG 6: AGADIR – TAROUDANNT – MARRAKECH (396 kms)
Saturday, March 24th       LEG 7: MARRAKECH – MARRAKECH (148 kms)




Aïcha Gazelle Rally


This competition is the standard reference for women's motorized adventure. It is open to amateur or professional women only who are then immersed in the Moroccan Sahara for 14 days on their 4X4, motorbike, ATV or truck. With its unique concept involving eco-driving without excess speed, based on traditional navigation without GPS the Rallye Aïcha des Gazelles du Maroc was the precursor to a new vision for auto rallies.


22nd edition takes place from 17th to 31st of March 2012. The Rallye Aïcha des Gazelles was the first rally to offer internet users the opportunity to follow, live, the competitors or the team of their choice, thanks to a satellite tracking system installed in each vehicle.

Against a Google Map background, internet users can experience the competition in real time.

They can keep track of the number of check points located, the route taken by their team, the team’s adventures throughout the day. The rankings, posted on line every evening, allow them to follow the progress of their favourite teams.Find out more on the rally website.



Tan Tan Moussem - The Tan Tan Festival




This important gathering (21 - 26th March) of the "Blue Men" takes place each year in the small desert town of Tan Tan in South Morocco. Members of neighbouring tribes gather for the Sidi Mohammed Mâa El Aynine Moussem which is both religious and for tourists.

Started in 1963, primarily as a religious festival, the annual Tan Tan Moussem draws thousands of members of nomadic tribes to gather together for a celebration of tradition and culture. In the past the focus of the Tan Tan Moussem was the tomb of the great Saharan leader Cheik Mohamed Laghdaf, who died in 1960 after fighting for decades against French and Spanish colonial invaders. In addition to being a festival of worship, this is an opportunity for tribes to socialize with song and dance, swap stories, share herbal remedy knowledge, compete in horse races and engage in some serious camel trading.

Due to the turmoil being experienced in the region in the mid-1970s, authorities at the time banned the Tan Tan Moussem. However, the festival had life breathed back into it when in 2004, UNESCO teamed up with the Moroccan Ministry of Tourism to revive the festival which they considered to be a “masterpiece of the oral and intangible heritage of humanity.” The response was overwhelming and the Tan Tan Moussem has reclaimed its spot as the largest gathering of nomadic tribes in northern Africa.

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