Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Major North-South Forum in Marrakech


North South Forum, a Florida-based Think Tank institute, have announced that they will be organizing North South Forum 2013 International Conference at Palmeraie Hotel Resorts Palais des Congres in Marrakech - under the theme "Rethinking North + South Trade & Development Cooperation Model". The conference will run March 11 to 13, 2013.


According to the organisers, "North South Forum 2013 is a 3 days conference with plenary workshops, exhibitions, delegate access one-on-one business meetings and discussions projects. You will Have the opportunity to meet great contacts, Shareholders Such as heads of state, Ministers, congressmen, ambassadors, directors and resources from around the world, international agencies (World Bank, UN, FAO, G20, OECD, EU, ​​BRIC, GCC APEC, Africa nations etc.) as well as executives from global financial institutions, sovereign wealth funds, investment organisms and top tier global corporations, enterprise federations and international chambers of commerce of selective Alongside NGOs."

International conferences are not only venues for exchanges of idea and for networking, but they are also big business and one in which there is fierce competition.  The use of images such as the one of Bill Clinton adds a certain gravitas to a conference. Yet, at this stage Clinton is not on the guest list.

That said, the list of invitees is impressive, although many are still to be confirmed.

At this stage confirmations have been received from (among others) Prof. Thomas J Sargent, Co-Winner of Nobel 2011 Economics Prize, Kim Campbell Canada's 19th Prime Minister, Jacques Attali - Founder of European Bank of Reconstruction & Development(BERD),Dr. Amani Abou-Zeid, Representative of the African Development Bank in Morocco, Almas Jiwani, President of UN Women Canada, Hamid Ben Elafdil CEO, Regional Investment Agency - Casablanca, Soad Sbai, Italian Parliament Deputy, Rome, Dr Philippe Douste-Blazy, Chair of the Board - UNITAID - Geneva, Sir Howard Davis, Former Director of the London School of Economics, Mohammed Nizar Choucair, President of the Association of Chambers of Commerce of the Mediterranean region (ASCAME) Lebanon; Marta Moya Diaz, Chief of the Section of Commerce EU Delegation in Rabat, Joumana Cobein, Head of IFC Maghreb - Rabat, Kingsley Aikins, President and Chief Executive of the Global Fund Ireland - Expert in Diaspora - Ireland

The conference was to have been held in October last year, but according to Hassane Alaoui Mdarhri, President & CEO of the North South Forum, the change was necessitated by the political upheavals at the time.
Mission Statement
The mission of North South Forum is to rethink the paradigm of the North + South Trade & Development Cooperation Model and help reshape Southern countries' global market positioning in the context of fast moving globalization. North South Forum will strive to add value and bridge the gap between North and South by engaging Governments, the Private, the Private Sector, Multilateral Agencies, Financial Institutions and NGO's. North South Forum is an open, independent and impartial International Organization with no political or religious affiliations.
For further information"
- Homepage: http://www.northsouthforum.org/index.php
- Speakers: http://www.northsouthforum.org/speaker.php
- Agenda: http://www.northsouthforum.org/agenda.php

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Monday, February 18, 2013

Two Top New York Chefs Jet Into Fez



Patrick and Megan at work in a Moroccan kitchen (photo Sandy McCutcheon)

Shoppers in the food souq at R'cif in the Fez Medina, would have been surprised to know that the two American's buying up big in the market today were top chefs on a mission. The task ahead of them must have seemed quite daunting. Having been in the country for less than twenty-four hours they were tasked with preparing a fusion of cuisines for a Medina dinner party.

The Rcif souq - a riot of colour and flavours (photo Philip Murphy)

Help was on hand with two locals guiding the chefs around the souq. Rachida was tasked with providing guidance on local cuisine and produce and The View from Fez's musical associate, Philip Murphy, translating and assisting with the logistics. The surprise dinner party was scheduled to be served at 8 in the evening, but knowing that the freshest produce was available in the morning, the shopping began at 11am.

'The only exception is the bread,' Rachida explained, 'which we will leave that until late in the afternoon when we can get freshly baked loaves straight from the firane (bakery).'

Rachida selects and checks every bit of produce (photo Patrick Phelan)
Selecting the best cuts of meat (photo Philip Murphy)


 For New York chef Patrick Phelan the experience was so different from markets in the USA. "This was a genuine market. I would call it utilitarian. Locals shopping with their kids. Nothing like the so-called farmers' markets in the States where there is always the latest gourmet delight. This was real food for real people. Impressive."

His wife, renowned pastry chef, Megan Fitzroy Phelan, was impressed with the quality and variety of vegetables available. "Almost everything was organic, which is a real plus." However, there were some vegetables she had never seen before.

"Mysterious vegetables," Megan laughs. "Long green stems that look like celery from a distance, but close up - I mean they were very different."

In New York, Patrick is the executive chef of Sonnier & Castle, a premier events catering firm. Megan is corporate pastry chef of Sullivan Street Bakery.


Patrick, Rachida and Megan
Cooking is not just about work, but about fun (photos Sandy McCutcheon)


After a conference about the menu and who would be responsible for each individual dish, the food preparation began at 3.30pm.

It was not simply the recipes or spices used that the New York chefs found to be different. Patrick and Megan both remarked on the very different technique for preparing vegetables. "Everything is done by hand, in the hand and not on a chopping board," Megan notes.

"Rachida's method of dicing onions was a rustic technique." Patrick said. "Scoring the onion laterally from the root to the tip of the onion and then slicing across the score to produce the diced or shredded effect. I have never seen anything like it - totally brilliant."

The other aspect of Moroccan cooking that impressed was the perfect seasoning. "Each vegetable in the salad was seasoned separately," Patrick remarked. "Not all mixed and broken and with a dressing poured over. Rachida showed us a way of assembling a mixed salad that is subtle and shows great skill."


Patrick adds seasoning to artichoke hearts in white wine, garlic and lemon syrup
Fresh marinaded strawberries with mint and yogurt (photo Suzanna Clarke)
From left - Robert Johnstone, Dr Gigi Kaye, Rachida, Philip Murphy and Patrick Phelan 
(Photo Sandy McCutcheon)
Food guru - Robert Johnstone (Photo Sandy McCutcheon)
And the verdict? Food guru and chef, Robert Johnstone, from Riad Idrissy, summed it up perfectly - "Delicious, simple and elegant."

Beef and apricot tagine and high-spiced turkey and mixed vegetable tagine
(photo Suzanna Clarke)

The View from Fez would like to thank: Philip Murphy, Megan Fitzroy Phelan, Patrick Phelan and Rachida, for a perfect evening of fine food, great music and good company.


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Friday, February 15, 2013

Visual Art on Screen in Fez



Electronic Super-Highway by Nam June Paik

On Saturday and Sunday evening, explore the way video has opened a window onto a new world of art and design

In Décennies vidéo France: j’explique un dessin noir à la fenêtre ouverte, presented by the Institut de Francais Fes, French and international artists show their work. This year is the fiftieth anniversary of the creation of art and video. It was in the city of Wuppertal, Germany, the Korean artist Nam June Paik first presented the new medium as a visual art experience. France has played a key role, by supporting television, institutions, galleries and museums which use video. These video showings cross the decades, covering major and forgotten figures and current and emerging imagery.

What: Art-Visuel Week
When: February 16 & 17, 5 - 7 PM
Where: Cinema Rex
Info: www.institutfrancaisfes.com


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Islamists Protest Against Moroccan-Jewish Movie


In the same week as Moroccans in Fez celebrated the opening of the fully restored Slat Al Fassiyine synagogue (see our story here) some 200 demonstrators gathered outside a theatre in Tangier to protest the screening of a film about Jewish immigration to Israel

Archive photo of the Roxy in Tangier

The Roxy today
The demonstrators in front of the Roxy Cinema in Tangier were mostly Islamists, according to the French daily Liberation, and were protesting the film “Tinghir-Jerusalem: Echoes of the Mellah” by the French-Moroccan producer Kamal Hachkar.

The film tells the story of the Jews of a small Berber village in Morocco and their departure for Israel during the 1950s and 1960s.

The protesters shouted slogans against “normalization” with Israel and Zionism.

Morocco’s minister of communications, Mustapha Khalfi, who also is the spokesman for the ruling Justice and Development Party, declined to comment on the protest, but Tangier Mayor Fouad El Omari said at a ceremony before the screening that “censorship is a real danger for art, especially when it is based on a narrow-minded ideology".

Hundreds attended a grand celebration marking the completion of the restoration of 17th century Jewish synagogue Slat Alfassiyine in Fes yesterday. The event marked the first step in a 2011 promise made by King Mohammed VI to restore all of the kingdom’s synagogues.

Slat Al Fassiyine is located in the famous El Mellah, the Mecca of Jewish culture in the Medina of Fes and will serve as a cultural centre focusing on interfaith dialogue..

The timing of the Tangier demonstration could not have been worse, but thankfully the protest was by an insignificant number of people.

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Rihanna to Headline Morocco's Mawazine 2013 Festival




The Mawazine Festival has confirmed that  seven-time Grammy winner, Rihanna, will perform at this year’s festival in the Moroccan capital, Rabat, as the headline attraction on opening night, Friday, May 24. 

Rihanna at this year's Grammy Awards


The Morocco Culture Association has announced that singer Rihanna will perform at the 12th annual Mawazine Festival, Rhythms of the World.

Rihanna will perform on the stage of the OLM Souissi in Rabat on Friday, May 24, 2013 as the headline opening act.

The performance by the R & B and pop superstar, before an estimated crowd of more than 70,000, will be part of her Diamonds World Tour. Rihanna won her 7th Grammy award at the 55th Grammy Awards in Los Angeles on Sunday, for Best Short Form Music Video, with “We Found Love.”

Each spring in May, the Mawazine Festival has rocked Rabat to the sounds of music from the four corners of the Earth, including exceptional artists such as Elton John, Mariah Carey, Whitney Houston, Shakira, Mika, Sugababes, Stevie Wonder, Kylie Minogue, LMFAO, Pitbull, and Alicia Keys.

The Mawazine ("Rhythms") Festival is a festival of pop music featuring Arab and international music icons. It has been running since 2001 and takes place annually in Rabat. Mawazine is one of several events which are intended to promote an image of Morocco as a tolerant nation, with a post on the event's website declaring that the festival intends to promote and "support Rabat, as a city open to the world".

Over the years a section of the community has criticised Mawazine for "encouraging immoral behaviour". There has also been criticism from politicians.

As The View from Fez reported back in 2010, (see story here) the head of the Justice and Development Party (PJD) parliamentary group, Mustapha Ramid, led the attack on Sir Elton John's appearance at the Mawazine Festival, "We categorically reject the appearance of this singer because there is a risk of encouraging homosexuality in Morocco," Ramid said at the time. "The problem is not with the singer himself but the image he has in society," another leading party member, Lahcen Daoudi, added. "Moroccan society has a negative perception of this singer and we must take it into consideration."




The Festival lineup this year looks stunning and with no acts likely to upset the politicians. The inclusion of a wide range of artists including the legendary Deep Purple and famed Gnawa musician Hamid el Kasri, would suggest that the festival, in its 12th edition, is set to be a great success.


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Thursday, February 14, 2013

Moroccan News Briefs #86


It was a joke - that backfired

Vivendi was put in the position of having to deny pressure to freeze the sale of its shares of Telecom Morocco. Late last week, the satyrical magazine, Charlie Hebdo, went to press with a story that French leader François Hollande had ordered Vivendi to delay the sale of its 53% shares owned by the French group in the capital of Morocco Telecom, until the end of the war in Mali. The goal, according to the magazine, was to allow the French authorities to monitor telephone conversations carried on Malian territory. But according to Vivendi, none of this is true.


"Vivendi denies in the strongest terms with the allegations contained in the article according to which Vivendi would" freeze the sale of its Moroccan subsidiary telephony, because it is essential for the Islamists of AQIM to be wire-tapped. " "The Elysee has not intervened with Vivendi. The process of a possible sale of Telecom Morocco continues and discussions are held with several potential partners," said Vivendi. Adding that "contrary to what the article, the first telephone operator in Mali is not Morocco Telecom but Orange with a market share of 60%.


Al Gore to speak in Morocco

The Moroccan company Menatec is organizing the Green Economy Forum, the first edition of which will take place on Thursday March 21, at the Mohammed VI International Conference Centre in Skhirat. This international event, presided over by HRH Princess Lalla Hasna, will be dedicated to promoting the green economy and sustainable Morocco.

As a special guest, Al Gore, will share his expertise and defend his vision of a global economy focused on sustainable growth. The Forum will gather professionals, local representatives, investors and intellectuals from the around the globe: Germany, Brazil, Canada, Spain, Untied States, France, India, Italy, Switzerland, UAE, and Great Britain.


Morocco reports Swine Flu case

According to the Moroccan Health Ministry a 40-year-old fisherman died in Dakhla, a town in the southern part of Western Sahara, after becoming infected with the AH1N1 swine flu virus.

There are 11 more cases of fishermen from the same boat who have picked up the virus, the ministry said. The flu cases were reported by the Regional Health Directorate in southern Western Sahara, which is administered by Morocco.

The man who died was “infected with a chronic disease,” the ministry said without specifying what that disease might be, adding that his 11 shipmates infected with the virus “are not showing any serious symptoms.” Apparently, the man died on board the fishing boat and, when it docked at the port of Dakhla, health authorities sent a medical team to test the rest of the crew and undertake precautionary measures.

When other cases of swine flu were detected, and even though none of those infected are showing serious symptoms, the ministry issued an alert at different health facilities to determine how to respond if additional cases turn up.

Although the World Health Organization in August 2010 declared the AH1N1 flu pandemic to be over, isolated cases of the disease have continued to appear over the past few months, specifically in Argentina, Israel, Palestine and Brazil. In Brazil, 133 people died in July 2012 after becoming infected with the swine flu virus.


Moroccans learn Chinese for only 200 dirhams year


Strange as it may seem Mandarin is now fashionable in Morocco. More young Moroccans want to learn Chinese than ever before. While some will take courses in private, others are attending the Confucius Institute in Rabat. Created in 2009, the Institute is at the Faculty of Letters and Human Sciences of the University Mohamed V-Agdal.

For only 200 dirhams, students and faculty of this university have the privilege of attending Mandarin classes. Students from other faculties pay 300 dirhams year. Civil servants and other employees, tpay 1500 dirhams. The courses include access not only to two hours tuition per week, but also activities organized by the Institute, such as poetry classes, dance, cooking or martial arts. Courses are taught in lecture halls and in the Faculty of Letters of the University. Nearly 200 Moroccans were registered this year to monitor progress. Courses are taught by Chinese professors.

Many more Moroccan businesses close their doors 

Approximately 133 Moroccan companies were closed, 101 operations downsizing and 8232 workers were laid off between January 2011 and September 2012 due to the economic crisis that hit Morocco.  According to the Moroccan Ministry of Employment business closures and downsizing have affected mostly small firms (less than 50 people) in the industrial sector (textiles and leather in particular) and services.  The regions of the Grand Casablanca, Meknes and Rabat-Salé-Tafilalet were most hard hit.

At thew same time, the Moroccan Minister of Economy and Finance, Nizar Baraka, announced more bad news: the budget deficit is at 7.1% of GDP in 2013, against a forecast of 4.8%. Baraka, who presented the preliminary results of the Moroccan economy in 2012, justified the increase in the budget deficit in 2013 by "external shocks related to the increase in raw materials and energy, and supporting domestic demand, through the Compensation Fund, as well as measures taken by the government to stimulate the national economy." He also attributes the increase in the deficit to GDP "accelerating the pace of execution of capital spending in the second half, an increase of 2.5 billion dirhams (dirhams) compared with initial forecasts''.


Wedding fever

This is possibly suitable to post on Valentine's Day... the wedding business is one area of economic growth in Morocco. According to the latest statistics more than 364,000 marriages were registered in Morocco in 2011. The Ministry of Justice and Liberties, have registered some 364,367 cases of marriage in the year 2011.


These statistics report some 364,000 cases of marriage recorded in 2011, against 325,212 cases in 2010 (12.04 pc) and 328,362 cases in 2009. According to the same source, some 56,198 divorces were registered in 2011, against 56,016 cases in 2010 and 55,255 in 2009.


Feel like dancing?  Salsa Latina in Casablanca

 A drop of sensuality and Latin passion will seize the White Tower Sofitel for three days from February 22 to 24. The Salsa Festival is inviting dance enthusiasts to participate in evening events and workshops - all open to the public.


The workshops will be held Saturday and Sunday in three large rooms, with a capacity of one hundred people. Forty-two dance workshops for all levels will be led by superstars such as Adolfo Indacochea (Peru), Andrea & Stefania (Italy), Skelia Dancers (Italy), Dancing Dragons (Spain), Bersy Style (Venezuela and Spain) Julio Volcano (Venezuela), Pablo & Laura (Spain), Kimo (Germany). The courses, lasting one hour each will continue throughout the two days. Lessons in bachata, afro-rumba, kizomba, cha cha cha, reggaeton and samba as well as many other dance lessons will be provided.


Dance at the French Institute in Fez


Tonight (14th) - Returning Home Late - The Nacera Belaza Dance Company
The event starts at 1900 at Dar Batha 15, Rue Salaj, Fez Medina

Returning home after the end of the training provided by the choreographer Nacera Belaza bound African dancers. The training is based on the search for a dialogue between traditional dance and contemporary writing, present in the cultural identities of both countries. The event is run with the support of the French Institute in Paris


 Agadir Film Festival runs out of cash and is postponed

The 10th edition of the Festival "Cinema and migration" Agadir has been postponed. This edition was to have been held from 4 to 9 March. The reason is "lack of funds", organizers said. Attempts  to upscale the festival and organize an international competition "could have been" a mistake and said they were unable to attract "sponsoring adapted to the scale of the action". The organizers of the festival initiated by the Association "Al Moubadara Attakafia" (Cultural Initiative) complained they were forced to take this decision after a record grant application has been filed with the commission to support the organization of festivals. They indicated that selection of the best films made ​​between 2011 and 2012 had been completed and that substantial sums by way of organizational costs of obtaining and transporting films have been incurred by the association in the preparation.



Happy Valentine's Day to our readers


Morocco World News (MWN) recently interviewed several Moroccans about what Valentine’s Day represents to them and whether or not it is worth celebrating.

On the one hand, several Moroccans expressed a negative attitude towards Valentine’s Day, stressing that observing it is but a waste of time. “Valentine’s Day doesn’t mean anything to me. I don’t believe in it,” Sarah Boutafi, a masters student told MWN. “It hasn’t changed anything in my life so far,” she explained. “Most Moroccans do not celebrate the event; all they do is blindly imitate the West,” said Meryem, a Moroccan teacher of English. “Celebrating this sort of event is against our conservative traditions.”

“The youth of today only waste their time indulging themselves in this triviality,” a Moroccan mother of four children told MWN. “I think Moroccan youth must think about something practical and more serious that can positively affect their day to day life,” she added.

For Ikram, a graduate student in Fez University believes that this celebration has nothing to do with reality. “Saint Valentine’s Day does not exist in our religion and is not adequate with our culture and traditions. Instead of making such a fuss it would be better to show some affection to our mothers, fathers and family,” she said.

Other Moroccans, however, hailed this celebration, believing it is a golden opportunity to know their fellow citizens more deeply, to intimately identify with them, and to reunite with one another.

Rachid Acim, a young Moroccan poet and writer, has a different take about the holiday. “Valentine’s Day is a day of love par excellence. For many youths, it is a moment in which they can recall their soul-mates,” he said. “A red rose may be evocative of love. A lovely postcard can fulfill the same purpose.” Mr. Acim added that he respects “all people’s ways of expressing love.” “As I view it, love is not in need of a day to be expressed. All our days should be predicated on love. It’s our essence and the objective of our being,” he continued.


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