Thursday, July 31, 2008

Moroccan News Roundup #3506



Prisoner amnesty marks King Mohammed VI's anniversary of his succession to throne.

King Mohammed VI has pardoned more than 1,000 people to mark the anniversary of his succession to the throne. King Mohammed VI, was in Fez on Wednesday, accompanied by prince Moulay Rachid, for a reception on the occasion of the ninth anniversary of the Throne Day.

Ten prisoners are to be freed immediately from a total of 1,030 people given complete or partial amnesty. It was unclear whether Islamist prisoners were among those given amnesty. Prisoners are regularly pardoned by the king to mark religious or state celebrations.

New Morocco and Rome flights for easyJet

EasyJet will launch two new routes from Paris (Charles de Gaulle) to Morocco next winter. This will include flights from Paris (Charles de Gaulle) to Casablanca and Tangier which will begin from 27 October 2008. From 02 November they will also launch flights to Rome (Fiumicino) from both London (Gatwick) and Milan (Malpensa).

Twenty-three killed, over 1,300 injured in horror road toll last week in Morocco

Twenty-three people were killed and 1,309 injured, including 87 seriously, in a total of 1,001 traffic accidents that occurred in urban areas on July 14 through 20.

A press release of the National Police (DGSN) blamed these accidents on non-control of vehicles, heedlessness of pedestrians and drivers, speeding, non-respect of road rules, and driving under influence.

According to the same source, a total of 8,332 fines were paid, amounting to a sum of about MAD 1,7 mln (USD 233,500), while 17,571 infractions were recorded.

Road accidents, referred to in Morocco as the "war of roads", claim thousands of lives each year. Besides an average daily toll of 10 victims, road accidents in Morocco cost the State about $ 1.2 bln per annum, that is 2.5% of the GDP, according to official figures.



Morocco's Cultural Divide


Youth culture in Morocco can be a bit of a headache for a government attempting to bridge the gap between modernity and the Islamist forces. Nothing illustrates that more clearly than the reaction to he "Boulevard des jeunes musiciens" in Casablanca.


The festival celebrated its tenth anniversary at the end of June. The alternative music festival excites young people but it annoys the government and has drawn the ire of the Islamist and populist press. Here is a special report from Qantara's David Siebert on http://www.menassat.com.

Mohamed "Momo" Merhari stands on the dusty ground of the Stade de l'Etoile rugby stadium and rubs his eyes wearily.

"The festival was banned two days ago," he says, explaining the hectic activity of the stagehands in the scorching midday heat. "It was only thanks to our protests that the ban was lifted again."

In the evening, everyone is relieved.

Already on the first day of the festival, thousands of guests have arrived. To mark the anniversary, there is a "best of" program. Groups like Fez City Clan, Hoba Hoba Spirit, and Haoussa made their first major appearances at the Boulevard; now they are the heroes of urban youth. Over 40 bands appear; the musical spectrum ranges from heavy metal to hip hop, dub, electro, and fusion – a potpourri of Moroccan styles, rock, and reggae.

100% Moroccan

When Momo founded the Boulevard with Hicham Bahou in 1999, no one anticipated that it would soon become the crystallization point of the subculture.

"At first, there were only three or four heavy metal and rap groups here," recalls the 36-year-old Momo.

By the next year, the rented hall was already bursting at the seams.

"Inside, the audience smashed the windows out of enthusiasm. Outside, there were thousands who still wanted to get in."

The Boulevard moved to a stadium. Last year, 160,000 people attended the concerts.

The new alternative music scene is more than a poor imitation of MTV. The bands sing in Darija, the Moroccan colloquial language. Fusion bands create such illustrious genres as hardcore Issawa and Gnawa rock. Hip hop bands sample Maghrebian music.

"The Moroccan musical culture is still very much alive among young people. Even rappers can play traditional songs at a wedding," says Reda Allali, a singer with Hoba Hoba Spirit.

"We open up the world to ourselves but still continue to be 100% Moroccan, because we retain our distinctive characteristics," adds Badre, a guitarist with the reggae Gnawa band Darga.

Critical hip hop

A new popular music culture of their own – for the Islamic kingdom, that is a minor revolution. The regime of the former king, Hassan II, saw culture as a threat.

"During the 1970s, they tore down theaters and concert halls here and put musicians in prison," Momo explains.

In the new alternative music scene, young people can express themselves again. The rappers are regarded as spokespersons for the poor ghettos. They denounce unemployment, corruption, and police tyranny. Raptiviste.net has released the mix tape Mamnou3 f´Radio, a collection of rap titles which were boycotted by radio stations or censored by the government.

"Critical hip hop represents a threat in a society where 60% are illiterates," declares the rapper Z-One.

The fusion bands approach the malaise with irony.

In "Miloudi," Hoba Hoba Spirit makes fun of the corrupt traffic police found on every corner, with their handlebar moustaches. Haoussa combines sarcastic social criticism with a radical esthetic concept – they appear wearing clown wigs and mix traditional Issawa musci with deafening punk, ska, and drum and bass.

'Cultural infiltration'

There are also obstacles, however.

"In Casablanca, there is one youth cultural center for half a million inhabitants. The functionaries there don't even know what a guitar amplifier looks like," laughs Khalid, a singer with Haoussa.

"Anyone who steps onto the stage with an electric guitar or in a hip hop outfit in Morocco is considered a troublemaker," explains Reda Allali.

Abdelkarim Berchid, the well-known theater director, recently deplored in a televison interview that hip hop was part of a "cultural infiltration" and tahini would soon be replaced by "hamburgers, chewing gum, and video clips." Hoba Hoba Spirit has sampled Berchid's interview into their song "El Kalakh," accusing the director of "intellectual arson."

Prophecies of doom about the "westernization of Morocco" are common; in its newspaper Attajdid, the Islamist PJD party has viciously attacked the Boulevard and in 2007 submitted a petition against the festival to parliament. Last year, Al Massae – an independent daily newspaper – entitled a report on the festival, "Hashish Smokers, Lesbians, and Young People Who Behave Like Animals."

Momo reacts to attempts to ban the festival with a shrug.

"In 2005, two civilian police officers came onstage. We were supposed to stop the concert, because three generals in the neighborhood couldn't sleep on account of the noise! We answered, '25,000 young people are having a good time here; are we supposed to cancel everything because of three generals?'"

The government also makes life difficult for the Boulevard.

"The Ministry of Culture canceled all our subsidies. Payment of the outstanding funds was stopped. Now we are missing 60,000 euros!" Momo complains.

Moroccan Movida?

Since admission is free, the only other source of income is sponsoring. The King's Mawazine Festival, on the other hand, receives 3 million euros.

"Most festivals here are controlled by the government," Momo says. "We are subversive and independent, and that annoys them. But that is what makes us strong. The festival belongs to the young people, so we have countless voluntary helpers."

The reform policy of the liberal King Mohammed gave rise to great hopes for a long time. "Nayda," Arabic for "upwards," was the slogan with which the revival of cultural life was acclaimed – an allusion to the "Movida," the sociocultural revolution that accompanied the transition to democracy in Spain. Nevertheless, ongoing social injustice and repression against human rights groups, independent media, and critical artists show that the process of opening up is taking place within a narrow framework.

"To talk about a Movida under these circumstances is an insult to people's intelligence," concludes Ali Amar, editor-in-chief of the Journal Hebdomadaire.

The audiences at the Boulevard remain optimistic, however. At the close of the festival, Hoba Hoba Spirit begins to play their hit "Bienvenue a Casa – Welcome to Casablanca". Tens of thousands cheer and shout enthusiastically, "Casa Nayda!"

Tags:

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Modern dance classes in the Fez Medina



Café Clock and Clock Culture have taken another great leap forward (well maybe, a leap, a roll and the splits!) - Yes, they have decided to offer Contemporary dance classes. The timing is great for those who wonder what to do with themselves on Sunday mornings. Asmae Kouli is a dancer based in Fez and will instruct in a variety of dance styles - oriental, belly, flamenco, salsa dance and expressive modern dance.


The classes will be held between 10 and 12 on Sunday mornings. The cost is only 30 dirhams and the first one kicks(leaps?) off on August 3.

Now... when will someone get Mike in a tutu?

Tags:

Monday, July 28, 2008

London Gatwick to Fez with Atlas Blue?


There will be a huge sigh of relief in Fez if the news is correct. According to some sources Atlas Blue will begin flying London Gatwick to Fez in the near future. This will go some way to make up for the loss of the Ryanair flights from Luton that were dropped after airport landing tarrifs were increased in Fez. British Airways had also stopped flights between London and Fez. The drop off in tourism was disasterous for Fez, costing the city millions of euros.

The View from Fez
will try and verify this news as soon as possible.


Tags:

Café Clock Cultural programme.




Tuesday 29 July : 4 p.m.
The Students from the Department of English at the Faculty of Dhar
Lemhraz will discuss Moroccan Superstitions and Traditional Beliefs at Café Clock. The Subul Assalam Centre for Arabic Learning will join
them.
All welcome. ( Free )

Sunday 3 August : 3 - 5 p.m..
Calligraphy @ the Clock : Open Table.
Discover the sacred art of Arabic calligraphy with artist and teacher
Mohamed Charkaoui.
(New price - 250 dh : Discounts Available)

Sunday 3 August : 7-8 p.m.
Henna @ the Clock
( price varies )

Sunday 3 August : 7 – 8:30 p.m.
Sunday Sunset Concert
Zanouba : Rai
( 20 dh )

Tags:

Morocco to shift tourist focus away from the beaches


There seems to be a change afoot in the Vision 2010 tourist plan as Morocco hopes to bolster its tourism industry by encouraging visits not only to beaches, but also to rural mountainous and desert destinations such as Chefchaouen, Ifrane and Ouarzazate.

Morocco's tourism industry is undergoing significant change as part of its 'Vision 2010' initiative to attract 10 million visitors by 2010. While the sector has traditionally focused on the beach vacation market, Morocco has begun targeting rural tourism in an effort to stimulate economic revival in remote areas and encourage expatriate Moroccans to both visit and invest in their homeland.

Every year, Morocco receives between 150,000 and 200,000 tourists who are attracted by this kind of tourism. They go to areas in the Atlas mountains, the desert and the countryside. In June 2003, Morocco launched an initiative to develop this sector by preparing a comprehensive work plan to develop "tourist reception avenues" in remote areas such as Chefchaouen, Ifrane, Imouzzer, and Ida ou Tanane, as well as places which already see tourist activities but which need rehabilitation and support, such as Great Atlas, Rachidia Desert, Ouarzazate and Zagora.

The rural tourism projects are focused on investing even in isolated douars (villages), with plans in place for 20 new inns. Nine such rustic accommodations located in Taroudant, Tiznit, Ouarzazate, Haouz, Tata, Chtouka ait Baha, Rachidia and Zagora have already started to receive visitors.

The rural tourism project is the fruit of co-operation between Morocco and the French Development Agency. The EU, along with several associations in the kingdom, provides financial support to enhance rural development and help revitalise the local economies. The goal is to boost opportunities for rural Moroccans so that they will be dissuaded from emigrating. The plan also aims at encouraging Moroccans living abroad to return and invest in their motherland.

Morocco's Social Development Agency provided training for the managers of the inns. However, the day-to-day operation is up to the owners, many of whom are people from the area who have either immigrated or retired.

Mohamed Lamine, a Moroccan living in France for more than 20 years, said: "It's about highlighting the features of Moroccan villages that enjoy significant qualifications and beautiful scenery. We are also sorry that only foreigners, who really appreciate such tourist treasures, benefit from them. Therefore, it has become our duty today to provide good reception conditions that would boost the importance of our legacy and our natural treasures."

The strategy to promote rural tourism includes providing douars with paved roads to the inns, electricity, drinking water and sanitary drainage canals.

"Naturally, this will not benefit tourists alone, but will also contribute to improving the social conditions of the residents of douars that host the inns; something that will boost the state's policy in curbing rural immigration," visitor Rachid Salah said in an interview for Magharebia.

Restored through French-Moroccan co-operation, the Agoudal Inn in the village of Echmarin offers classic Moroccan cuisine in a rich rural setting.

Agoudal Inn in Echmarin village is one of the rural tourism project's success stories. Owners Mohamed and Abderrahman Marir received help from the Social Development Agency and the French Development Agency to rebuild an old house while preserving its traditional design.

Like all restored inns, Agoudal offers guests classic Moroccan cuisine. One French tourist expressed his admiration for the Moroccan tagine, confirming that while its flavour may differ from region to region, the same taste and relish "makes you eat insatiably and forget about any diet."

"The natural environment and fresh air opens up your appetite all day long," he added.

Mohammed, a tourist from Casablanca, chose to spend his vacation among the valleys, hills and mountains of the south, of which he had long heard but had never seen.

"The tourist finds among these charming sights everything that relieves the soul after a whole year of work," he said.

It's also a souvenir-hunter's paradise. "Tourists will not leave empty-handed, because the people there enjoy magnificent manual skills to make traditional local products," he added.

"These inns also help create job opportunities for the people of the area," Mohammed noted, pointing out that locals take visitors on camel rides or offer sightseeing tours of the historical landmarks which abound in the area.

Morocco is working to help the long-isolated and marginalised local population manage tourism revenue and re-distribute the profits generated by the new visitors.

The local economic boost "preserves the dignity of Moroccans, spares them the needs and the pains of immigration in search of another means of income away from family and home," said expatriate Mohamed Lamine, who has lived in France for more than 20 years.

"The project has rehabilitated a remote mountainous area and made the standard of living of the people improve," agreed Abdalah Bahamu, the owner of Sirwa Inn in Tagmoute douar.

The Amlen Inn is located 4 kilometres from the Taforalt tourist area. The owner says it sustains his family, helps them cling to the land where they were born and creates job opportunities for the people of Amlen.

Tags:

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Smoking ban in Morocco



This week Morocco's House of Representatives unanimously passed a bill banning smoking in public places, tobacco advertising and selling to minors. The bill is designed to create legal measures to prevent tobacco smoking, filling the legal gap that the absence of sanctions represented, limiting the bad effects of tobacco smoking and generating additional financial resources.

According to a statement from the Lower House, the measure is also aimed at protecting citizens' health, particularly that of young people, and intends to expand the ban of tobacco smoking in all enclosed public places, including public buildings and on public transport.

At the same time the authorities in charge of health and education will conduct campaigns to raise public awareness on the dangers of tobacco smoking in public.

It is still not clear how the law will be enforced but a statement says the the new law allows the police to draw up reports on any breach.

Tags:

Café Clock in Fez this weekend


This weekends programme at Café Clock.

Saturday 26 July : 4 p.m.
Discussion : Women in Islam.
Sabul Assalam Centre and Clock Culture
( Free)

Sunday 27 July : 3 - 5 p.m..
Calligraphy @ the Clock : Open Table.
Discover the sacred art of Arabic calligraphy with artist and teacher
Mohamed Charkaoui.
(New price - 250 dh : Discounts Available)

Sunday 27 : 7 - 8 p.m.
Henna @ Cafe Clock
( price varies )

Sunday 27 July : 7 p.m.
Sunday Sunset Concert : GNAOUA @ The Clock
( 20 dh )

Tags:

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

New low cost flights from Spain to Morocco



Spanish low-cost air company Air Nostrum, a subsidiary of Iberia Airlines, has this week announced that it will launch new air routes linking Malaga and Barcelona to Tangier and Casablanca.

The Tangier-Malaga and Tangier-Barcelona flights, are scheduled to start July 25 at a rate of two flights a week for each air route. The flights between Malaga and Casablanca will start from October 26, at a rate of four flights a week.

Established in 1994, Air Nostrum is a regional airline based in Valencia, Spain. It operates an extensive network of 91 domestic and international routes to 51 destinations.


Tags:

11th African Cinema Festival



The 11th African Cinema Festival opened on Saturday in the central city of Khouribga, and will run till July 26.

Sixteen movies are competing in this year's event, representing, besides Morocco, several African countries, including Egypt, Tunisia, Algeria, Senegal, Mali, Rwanda, Benin, Mauritania, South Africa, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Burkina Faso, and Chad.

A tribute was paid, at the opening ceremony, to Senegalese filmmaker, late Ousmane Sembène, in recognition of his efforts to shed light on Africa and its rich heritage through his works.


Tags:

Movie - Prince of Persia starts shooting in Morocco


Icelandic actor Gísli Örn Gardarsson is currently in Morocco to play one of the main parts in the new Jerry Bruckheimer movie Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time. Shooting began yesterday. The film is based on the video game, which follows an adventurous prince who teams up with a rival princess to stop an angry ruler from unleashing a sandstorm that could destroy the world. He is expected to visit Fez during breaks in the shoot.

The film is being produced by powerhouse Disney producer Jerry Bruckheimer, directed by Mike Newell, written by both Jeffrey Nachmanoff (The Day After Tomorrow) and one of the game's creators, Jordan Mechner. In addition to shooting in Morocco, the film will be using the Pinewood Shepperton studios in England. Considering the line-up involved, we can expect a big budget and great production values set within a warmer version of The Day After Tomorrow combined with the action and pacing of Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire.

The movie is being shot in the city of Oukaimeden, at an altitude of almost 3,000 meters in the Atlas Mountains.

“It is much more exotic than I expected. I thought the city would be more Western,” Gardarsson said. “It is like from 1001 Nights; snakes, monkeys and desert storms.”

Gardarsson will be involved in filming until November and the final shots are scheduled for December 12. Other actors who play key roles in the movie include Jake Gyllenhaal, Ben Kingsley and Alfred Molina.

Gísli Örn Gardarsson

Gísli Örn Gardarsson was born in Iceland, but grew up in Oslo. He graduated from the Academy of Arts in Reykjavik in 2001. Gísli is a co-founder of Vesturport, a prestigious theatre company which has won a variety of nominations and awards for its productions throughout Europe. The company has bookings through 2008 all around the world. In his theatre career, Gísli has played Romeo in Romeo and Juliet at the Young Vic Theatre in London and in the West End. He played Walser (the male lead) in Knee High's critically acclaimed adaptation of Angela Carter's novel, Nights At The Circus, which was staged in London and elsewhere in England. He co-adapted, directed and played the part of Gregor Samsa in Kafka's Metamorphosis (original music composed by Nick Cave and Warren Ellis) at the Lyric Theatre in London's Hammersmith. On the big screen, Gísli was first cast in Ragnar Bragason and Dagur Kári's DRAMARAMA in 2001. Following his roles in CARAMELS in 2003 and BEOWULF & GRENDEL in 2005, he co-wrote, co-produced and starred in CHILDREN (playing the role of twins) in 2006. The film, which was directed by Ragnar Bragason, was screened at the San Sebastian Film Festival and Filmfest Hamburg, and Gísli received a "Best Actor" nomination for his performance.

SELECTED FILMS

PARENTS (FORELDRAR), 2007
Ragnar Bragason (Iceland)

CHILDREN (BÖRN), 2006
Ragnar Bragason (Iceland)

BEOWULF & GRENDEL, 2005
Sturla Gunnarsson (Canada/Iceland/UK)

CARAMELS (KARAMELLUMYNDIN), 2003
(short)
Gunnar B. Gudmundsson (Iceland)

DRAMARAMA (VILLILJÓS), 2001
Ragnar Bragason, Dagur Kári (Iceland)

Tags:

Friday, July 18, 2008

Russian company to invest 1 billion € in Morocco



According to rumours around the boardrooms of Moscow, the place to invest your massive profits is Morocco. While there have been individual Russian businessmen dipping their toe in the real estate market, this time it is one of the big boys, or more accurately in this case, big girls. Inteco (Интеко in Russian, "Inteko") is a Russian construction company, 99% of which is owned by Yelena Nikolayevna Baturina (Елена Николаевна Батурина)Russia's richest woman and wife of Moscow city mayor, Yuriy Luzhkov.

Yelena Nikolayevna Baturina

It is not a company without a hint of trouble and on October 9 2005 executive director of Inteko-agro, Alexander Annenkov, was attacked by three assailants armed with axes. He survived. On October 13 2005, Inteco lawyer, Dmitry Steinberg, was shot at the entrance to his house. Baturina attended his funeral.

Inteco, the real estate subsidiary of Russian gas company Gazprom, announced its intention to invest close to a billion euros in real estate and tourist projects in the north of the country.

Inteco has only recently established a Moroccan entity, which will invest 488 million euros for the construction of villas and apartments, golf courses and tennis courts, a mall and a marina on a sprawling 118.6 acres in the Rif mountains.

The Russian group plans to carry out a similar project close to the city of Tetouan on an area of 2,965 acres.

Tags:

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Cafe Clock - this week's Cultural Programme




Exhibition
Café Clock's rotating exhibition is currently showcasing four Moroccan artists' work including painting, photography and contemporary calligraphy art. Clock Culture has curated large scale
photography by Omar Chennafi, abstract research painting by Sefroui artist EL Abbas El Abed, figurative paintings by Marakeshi Abderahim Iqbi and calligraphy art by Fassi artist Mohamed Charkaoui.
Until October 1st

Wednesdays : 3 – 5 p.m. Open Mic
Clock culture is always looking for musicians to audition for Clocks
Sunday Concerts. If you are a musician and would like to collaborate
with us please come with a chosen instrument on a Wednesday afternoon
between 3 and 5 o'clock.
Turn up the Culture!

Saturday 19 July : 8 p.m
La Symphonie Marocaine : Film
Director: Kamal Kamal
Cast: Abdellah Lamrani, Hicham Bahloul, Younes Migri, Majdouline Idrissi
After the tragic death of their buddy, a band of hobos get together
and assemble an orchestra to play a symphony composed by their
deceased friend. They dream of playing London's prestigious Albert
Hall, but end up scoring a huge success in their railroad scrap-yard
Sabul Assalam Centre and Clock Culture ( Free )

Sunday 20 July : Sunday Sunset Concert : 6 p.m
Hasna : Chanteuse de Issawa
(20 dh)

Sunday 20 July : Henna @ The Clock : 7 p.m.
(Price varies)

Sunday 20 July:
Calligraphers Holiday. Please note that there is no calligraphy course this weekend. The calligrapher's open table continues on Sunday afternoons from 27th of July.

Tags:

Monday, July 14, 2008

Cooking Moroccan-style




Moroccan food is one of the most sensual, appealing unashamedly to the senses in a way that no other cuisine can match. It's world-renowned for its delicious combinations of spices in tagines (casseroles or stews), the delicate b'stilla pastry that wraps a mixture of chicken or pigeon with nuts and dusted with sugar and cinnamon, its perfect patisserie served with mint tea ... it's all mouth-wateringly good.

A Moroccan meal starts either with harira, the traditional soup with vegetables, tomatoes, chickpeas and lamb, or with a huge array of cooked salads. These are usually vegetarian and can include carrots with cinnamon, aubergine puree, marinated courgettes. red and green peppers and various types of olives. They're served with flat rounds of bread that are used to dip and scoop.

A tagine might well be the main course. The conical-lidded pot of the same name is found everywhere - lift the lid and savour the tantalising waft of spices. Traditional dishes are chicken with preserved lemon and olives, lamb with prunes and almonds or kefta (meatballs) in a tomato sauce with eggs. Or of course it could be couscous, traditionally eaten for Friday lunch but always available in restaurants. Meat and vegetables are served over the couscous, along with the sauce they were cooked in. Fish is excellent too, either cooked in a tagine or smothered in chermoula herbs and spices and grilled over coals.

Interest in Moroccan cuisine is growing world-wide and there are Moroccan restaurants in every major city. Visitors to Fez can spend a day learning the finer points of Moroccan cookery with Lahcen Beqqi who runs courses at a local guesthouse. Lahcen takes his clients to the souk first, to buy the ingredients for the meal. And this is not a trip to the supermarket - the market has tiny stalls where vegetables are piled high, plump and colourful, and most of all, seasonal. Then it's back to the guesthouse kitchen for a day of preparation and cooking and then eating and enjoying. See Lahcen's recipe below.

Lahcen with the BBC's Rick Stein

Canadian connection
Well-known Canadian chef and food writer, Deb Rankine, was so enthralled with the cuisine on a recent trip to Fez, that she's putting together a foodie tour in November this year called the Culinary Caravan.
Chef Deb (above) says, 'My focus at Culinary Caravan is to envelop my clients and students with the scents and flavours of other cultures. I comb both the world and my own backyard for authentic ingredients to integrate into my dishes.'

Participants on this tour will stay at the magnificent Riad Ibn Battouta and have three full days of practical cooking instructions (and eating!), as well as shopping for ingredients - and no doubt souvenirs such as ceramics, jewellery and carpets - relaxing on the rooftop terrace at the riad, exploring the medina, enjoying the hammam and plenty of sampling the wares of local restaurants.

For those who can't make it to Fez, there's always the popular blog, Moroccan Kitchen. Put together by Sabah and Samira of Riad Laaroussa, it gives a taster of what you can expect from Fassi cuisine with the recipes served at this magnificent guesthouse.

Sabah and Samira work on the blog


Lahcen's recipe for Lamb, Prune and Date Tagine

For 3 people:

* ½ kilo of a shoulder of lamb
* 250 grams of dried prunes (around 30 prunes)
* 6 dates (pitted)
* one big red onion, sliced
* 200 grams of roasted almonds
* one cinnamon stick
* one pinch of ginger
* one pinch of saffron
* one pinch of salt (or to taste)
* one pinch of pepper (or to taste)

Wash the prunes and soak them in one litre of water. Put ginger, saffron, and lamb in a big pot. Cook on medium flame. Mix for one minute. Add olive oil and onion. Leave for 5 minutes. Add salt and pepper. Drain the prunes but keep the water! Pour it into the pot with the lamb. Let the meat cook for 1 ½ hours (or however long it takes to cook) on a medium flame. *You can also leave it on a low flame and let it cook longer. 15 minutes before serving, add the prunes and dates.

top photo: Suzanna Clarke

Tags:

Friday, July 11, 2008

Faces in the Medina - Dr Tony Langlois




Tony Langlois is no stranger to Fez. He first visited in 1994 and has spent the last 16 years researching the music of the Maghreb. Lumen caught up with him on this flying visit.

As an ethnomusicologist at University College, Cork in Ireland, Tony's focus is looking at the culture of music from the inside. He lived in Oujda for 8 months and before that in Oran in Algeria for a similar amount of time, and spent six months with an Andalous orchestra. He's researched this traditional style of music in the Moroccan/Algerian border area, including that of the A'issawa and Gnawa. He says that new types of music emerge all the time and he especially enjoys looking at the social life around music and culture. 'I've been going to Oujda for so many years now, that I've watched my friends' children grow up', he says.

Regadda is the new form of popular music from the Berkane and Oujda region and it's close to the traditional tribal music of the area: Mokhtar el Berkani is the most well-known exponent. This is the focus of Tony's current research, along with the Jewish music of western Algeria. For this, he visits the emigree musicians who now live in Marseille.

Tony studied Moroccan Arabic at the Arabic Language Institute in Fez some four years ago, which of course helps him in his work and gave him lots of friends in Fez. He's also attended the Fes Festival of World Sacred Music as he's interested in festivals and their cultural influence. He's in Fez this time to catch up with friends and keep an eye on the many pop VCDs that are so widely available in Fez and of special interest to him. He admits to still getting lost in the medina.

In Cork, Tony teaches a course on Arab music, particularly that of North Africa, as well as other forms such as Cuban. He teaches his students to play the music too, using banjos, mandolins, violins, percussion and even accordions. In his spare time, Tony plays stringed instruments and has a particular passion for composing electronic music. He's a member of the group Mission Creep.

Tony can be found at http://tonylanglois.wordpress.com


Tags:

Thursday, July 10, 2008

Subsidies slowing Morocco's inflation to 3.1%



According to the High Planning Commission (HCP), Moroccan consumer prices are likely to rise 3.1% this year, compared with 3.8% in 2007, as subsidies on fuel and basic foods offset soaring world commodity prices.



Year-on-year inflation was 5.4% in May. Finance Minister Salaheddine Mezouar (pictured above) last month forecast annual inflation of 2.7% to 2.9%, up from an initial estimate of 2.0%.

The HCP said inflation would be below the rate in many developing countries because of the state subsidies, which would cost more than MAD 40 billion this year, way ahead of the MAD 15 billion foreseen in the 2008 finance law.

Morocco imports all of its petroleum needs and around half its grain.

The subsidies shield the country from high imported fuel and commodity prices and allow the 14% of Moroccans who live in poverty to feed themselves.

The IMF said last month the cost of the subsidies could double as a share of GDP this year to reach about 5%, more than the government spends on investment.

"This raises questions over the ability of the state to continue absorbing imported inflation at a time when the imperatives of human development still require large financial resources," the HCP said on Wednesday.

The state-run body forecast economic growth of 6.2% in 2008, in line with a recent government forecast, with non-farm growth slowing to 5.2% from 6.2% in 2007.

Tags:

Café Clock - this week's cultural programme




Welcome to this weekend's cultural program @ Café Clock.

Saturday 12 July : 4:00 p.m
Introduction to Moroccan Arabic.
This lecture will focus on basic Moroccan Arabic (darija) and
practical information on Moroccan culture. Basic greetings,
introductions and pleasantries will be taught and their origins
explained, as well as gestures and mealtime etiquette.
Sabul Assalam Centre and Clock Culture
( 25 dh )

Sunday 13 July : 3 – 5 p.m.
Calligraphy @ the Clock : Discover the sacred art of Arabic
calligraphy with artist and teacher Mohamed Charkaoui.
(New price - 250 dh : Discounts Available)



Sunday 13 July : 7 - 8 p.m.
Henna @ The Clock
( Price varies)

Sunday 13 July : 7 – 8:30 p.m
Sunday Sunset Concert
Mouloud El Meskaoui : Sahara Music ( 20 dh )

Tags:

Morocco's Olympic hopes.



With the Olympics coming up we decided to have a look at how Morocco hopes to go in the hunt for medals. If history is anything to go by, the chances are slim, but that it not to say that Morocco will not gain medals.

Above - Hicham El Guerrouj wins the men's 1,500 metres gold medal in Athens.
Below -
Morocco's Hasna Benhassi (l), Britain's Kelly Holmes, gold medallist (c) and Jolanda Ceplak of Slovenia pose with their medals for the women's 800 meters




A Chance in Taekwando?

Morocco's taekwondo team are hoping to break their Olympic medal drought an extensive training programme held in Dubai. According to Morocco's chief taekwondo coach, Hassan Esmaili, "We are confident of bringing home at least one medal from Beijing."

The Moroccan taekwondo team made a clean sweep at the Arab Championships Cup held in Bahrain last month. The Moroccan women's team secured the top honours among the ten participating countries winning four gold, one silver and two bronze.

Representing Morocco in Beijing will be Ghizlan Toudali in the under 49kgs category, while Mona Bin Abd Al Rasool will participate in the under 67kgs category - the same as Shaikha Maitha. Abdul Kader Zaroori will take part in the over 80kgs category for men.

"Given the talent these players have shown in the past, I won't be mistaken if we do win our first ever Olympic medal for Morocco," the coach said.

Zaroor won a silver at the World Taekwondo Championships in Spain (2005) and followed this with a bronze at the World Taekwondo Championships in Beijing last year.

"The competition is going to be tough at the Olympics, but we feel confident we will realise the dream for Morocco," Esmaili said.

Shaikha Maitha Bint Mohammad Bin Rashid Al Maktoum (top row, fourth from left), with the Morocco National taekwondo team at the Zabeel Club in Dubai.

The Moroccan team will continue training in Dubai till later this week. Their next stop will be a camp in Tunisia before leaving for Korea for one final training stop and their departure to China for the Olympics.


Morocco's Olympic Medal Tally

Track and Field

1960 Marathon Men Rhadi Ben Abdesselam 2:15:41 SILVER
1984 5000m Men Said Aouita 13:05.59 GOLD
1984 400m Hurdles Women Nawal El Moutawakel 54.61 GOLD
1988 800m Men Said Aouita 1:44.06 BRONZE
1988 10000m Men Brahim Boutayeb 27:21.46 GOLD
1992 1500m Men Rachid El Basir 3:40.62 SILVER
1992 10000m Men Khalid Skah 27:46.70 GOLD
1996 5000m Men Khalid Boulami 13:08.37 BRONZE
1996 10000m Men Salah Hissou 27:28.59 BRONZE
2000 1500m Men Hicham el Guerrouj 3:32.32 SILVER
2000 5000m Men Brahim Lahlafi 13:36.47 BRONZE
2000 3000m Steeplechase Men Ali Ezzine 8:22.15 BRONZE
2000 400m Hurdles Women Nouzha Bidouane 53.57 BRONZE
2004 1500m Men Hicham el Guerrouj 3:34.18 GOLD
2004 5000m Men Hicham el Guerrouj 13:14.39 GOLD
2004 800m Women Hasna Benhassi 1:56.43 SILVER

Boxing


1988 Featherweight Abdelhak Achik BRONZE
1992 Bantamweight Mohamed Achik BRONZE
2000 Featherweight Tahar Tamsamani BRONZE

Tags:

Wednesday, July 09, 2008

The new Guesthouse Association in action



The View from Fez reported recently that a new Guesthouse Association had been set up. Jennifer Lapostol is Vice President and liaison for the English-speaking community. Here's what she has to say about the Association and her own role.

Jennifer Lapostol

There have been organisations like this in the past, but they never seemed really to accomplish anything, due to apathy, disorganisation or internal politics. The number of guesthouses has more than quadrupled since I arrived in Fez in 2002, with more and more opening all the time. I think this influx of 'new blood' combined with the dynamic young President, Mehdi Abbadi, will make all the difference to the Association.

For the first time, foreign owners comprise a large part of the Board, and we are all very excited to be recognised as an important part of the community and to be given the opportunity to work together to improve living and working conditions in the medina. The key now is to maintain the optimism and momentum generated by the meeting and Board elections in late May.

The Board has met several times since the elections and has developed a comprehensive list of objectives, primarily to promote, defend and represent maisons d'hotes owners. One of the first projects will be to create a website in French, English and Arabic to disseminate information to all home-owners and prospective home-owners. The site will include PDF documents of current regulations and procedures for opening and running a guesthouse. This is extremely important since, to date, information regarding this has been difficult to find, obscure and even conflicting.

We have also drafted 'quality standards' for guesthouse owners to ensure that all visitors to Fez, whether they are staying in a simple dar or the grandest riad, will be assured of comfortable, safe and professional accommodation, and that employees of guesthouses will be offered appropriate compensation and training for the important services they provide.

Of course, security is a major concern for everyone at the moment, and the Association made this a priority at their last meeting.

Importance for the whole English-speaking community of Fez
Apart from The View from Fez, the growing Anglophone community in Fez does not really have a focal point - though on any given day, you can run into a good number of them at Cafe Clock. The position of Vice President/Anglophone Liaison was created to address the fact that many English-speakers have felt excluded from meetings conducted in French and confounded by difficult regulations published in French or even Arabic. My job is to represent the English-speaking community in the Association and to disseminate all relevant information to English-speakers.

I have been creating a mailing list of all Anglophone home-owners in the Fez medina, though I still have large gaps, so I encourage anyone interested who has not received an email from me to contact me at info@darroumana.com. In the next few days, everyone on my mailing list should receive a short survey regarding their experiences and concerns about the medina. Everyone's responses are vital to help me get an idea of what our priorities are and to help shape policy in the future.

In addition, I would like to invite all home-owners, guesthouse owners and prospective owners to an information gathering at 18h00 on 16 August at Dar Roumana (see the map here). It will be a great chance for everyone to meet and discuss ideas. See you there, insha'allah!


Tags:

Tuesday, July 08, 2008

Buying Moroccan Property - Update


Six years ago Morocco launched a massive tourism and residential development programme 'Vision 2010' which had the ambitious goal of bringing 10 million visitors a year to Morocco by 2010 and build 250,000 hotel beds, including 180,000 located in or around the cities. So with two years left before 2010 we decided to check the scorecard.


The Economy.


Morocco’s economy has been doing well. HM King Mohammed VI is a dynamic monarch who has brought substantial reform to Morocco as well as national reconciliation. Unemployment fell in 2006 to 15.5% in towns (9.7% nationally), down from 18.4% in 2005 (11% nationally).

However national GDP is only expected to grow by 2.5% in 2007, according to the Finance Ministry, due to a poor harvest. This follows a spectacular economic performance in 2006, when GDP grew by 8%. Nevertheless indicators suggest an economy which is steaming ahead, with electricity consumption up 22.9% on the year to March, industrial equipment imports up 12.7%. This is combined with an inflation rate of a mere 2.7%.

In 2007, a study published by the Georgetown University-based Center for Strategic and International Studies called 'Arab Reform and Foreign Aid: Lessons from Morocco' concluded that Morocco provides a valuable lesson in political and economic reform. It showed that top-down reforms can be highly effective, if skilfully and determinedly carried out, and that aid donors should lean towards countries where evidence of such commitment is to be found.

Morocco received US$3 billion in foreign direct investments in 2007, mostly from the Gulf, according to reports in the leading newspaper Aujourdhui.



The Tourist Boom.

According to the National Tourism Observatory, 2.5 million people visited the country during the first five months of the year.( See our full stories here and here )

Figures cited by the Maghreb Arabe Presse showed that this is 11 per cent higher than the amount recorded a year earlier.

For a long time Morocco has been a magnet for the glitterati with people such as Mick Jagger, Princess Alexandra, David Bowie, Richard Branson, Alain Delon and Sting all purchasing homes, often around Marrakesh but now the move is to more romantic destinations - coastal villas or the Medina of Fez.

The coasts ( being developed under a scheme called ‘Plan Azur’) are a major destination for French tourists and increasingly for retirees. There is a whole associated infrastructure of guest houses, French-speaking newspapers and doctors, and an increasing number of French settlers. drawn by the historic charm lost in many other Arab countries, plus the warm, dry, healthy climate, and a beautiful landscape, with its markets and traditional architecture, its car-free medinas and palaces hiding breathtaking gardens.

According to the Vision 2010 plan there will be 1,300 weekly flights into Morocco, with 15,6 million passengers per year. Many large international hotel chains have already built developments, including Club Med, Liwa, Accor, and Sol Melia. Tourism almost invariably brings increased interest in buying in the country, and will likely have an enormous impact both on Morocco’s economy, and on property prices.

Six huge new tourist stations / residential developments in priority coastal resorts are at the heart of Plan Azur, including: Saidia (Oujda), Lixus (Larache), Mazagan (El Jadida), Mogador (Essaouira), Taghazout (Agadir) and Plage Blanche (Guelmim).

Saidia is being developed by Fadesa and will have 30,000 beds and three 18-hole golf courses, the first unit opened in 2007. Lixus is being shared between three developers and will have 12,000 beds, and two golf courses; the first unit opens in 2009. Mazagan is being developed by Resort Co, and it will have 3,700 beds, opening in 2009.

Mogador is being developed by three developers, will have 6,800 beds, and open in 2009
Taghazout is being developed by Taghazout resort and will have 18,000 beds, and open in 2009
Plage Blanche seems likely to be built by Fadesa, will have 19,500 beds and open in 2012.



Outside the mass market

The long Moroccan real estate boom, of course pre-dates the mass market, and concentrates on the ‘authentic’ Morocco, and above all on giving Westerners a stylish life in exotic, traditional surroundings..

At the core of this has been the craze for buying Riads. It is not unusual to see Riads – traditionally-shaped Moroccan houses, with grand salons giving onto a central tiled courtyard, with a garden at the centre - offered on the Internet for €500,000 or in the case of the most palatial, €1,000,000. Around 7,500-15,000 French residents live around Marrakech in these and other accommodations.

Will Morocco run out of Riads? Those in the know have been searching out property in Fes, but experience has shown this is not an undertaking for the faint hearted. For those with more money and less interested in the challenges of Fes, there are 50,000 Riads in Marrakech and only 1,000 are sold to foreigners. The coasts are also a major destination for French and other European tourists and those looking for a second home. After the boom caused by the French, “the English market is beginning,” says Charles El Fassy of the real estate agent Cabinet Charles El Fassy.

“We have had five years of French buyers. We thought: “Things cannot go on like this any more!” says El Fassy. “But they are going on. It is beginning all over again, with the British.” Prices have increased threefold in four years, he says.

Others claim the English interest has slowed down and the first signs are showing of an increase in American involvement in the market.

Morocco’s climate makes it a perfect destination all year round. It is possible to ski, fish and surf in Morocco, and mountain trekking is very popular.



The major centres of Morocco


The cultural and physical attractions of Morocco centre on its traditional cities - Marrakech, Fes, Meknes, Casablanca, and Essaouira - and on its one coastal resort, Agadir.

Marrakech is an extraordinarily exotic city, with its drama heightened by a location at the foot of the Atlas Mountains. It is expecting 3.5 million tourists by 2010. Marrakech has a complete tourism zone, Aguedal. A public transport system carries tourists from the district into the city centre for its souks and traditional markets selling copperware, wool merchandise, and carpets and kaftans. There are no less than 27 five-star hotels in Marrakech.

Fes is the jewel in the crown for those who want an authentic "Moroccan" lifestyle, but, as mentioned before, iy has its challenges. The more than 9000 alleyways can be daunting and the general feeling is of a more conservative city. Yet, for those wanting to purchase an ancient house, prices are far less of a problem than in the overcrowded market of Marrakech.

In Casablanca the French built a city in a French idiom, heavily influenced by the architecture of the Arab-Andalusian Empire. The city centre has a modernist grandeur, with plenty of space and light. Casabablanca is large, modern, and agreeable, with five golf courses less that an hour away.

Meknes was recognized as a World Heritage Site in 1996. Its physical location, on a plateau, made it Morocco’s trade crossroads. Its magnificent architecture was built by the 17th century Ruler, Sultan Moulay Ismail. Over 55 years he built palaces, mosques, gardens, and lakes. At his death the unfinished buildings including the royal palace - the Versailles of Morocco - which fills most of the old city.

Agadir is Morocco’s main seaside destination. Beautiful beaches, luxurious hotels, an ultra-modern airport are all combined with a moderate climate. Agadir’s beach is spectacular. Some 10 kilometres in length, it is clean and wide. Agadir enjoys a continuous breeze from the Atlantic, so that the temperature is pleasant all day.

Tangier has a louche reputation dating from the 1920s, when it was an outpost for British paederasts. Then in the 1950s, beats, dropouts and writers like Burroughs and Bowles, Ginsberg and Kerouac, Leary and Eldridge Cleaver came to Tangier. It is a messy, rather ugly city. Now its coastline is being covered with resorts and new developments.

Essaouira is popular with independent travelers. This is partly because of its long beach, and partly because of its laid-back atmosphere. Yhe town has long been magnet for Moroccan poets and creative talent. In the Place de L’Indépendence, which is the main square in the centre of Essaouira, there are dozens of cafés and restaurants. It is a pleasant place to eat, drink, and watch the world go by.

Some make the analogy with Turkey. Morocco appeals to European tourists, holiday-makers and retirees for much the same reasons as Turkey. Like Turkey, but arguably more so, Morocco has large qualities of well-preserved architectural history. It has charm, exoticism, and a historical built environment which elsewhere in the Arab world has been largely obliterated by modern buildings. And it has geographical variety, the Atlas mountains, and wonderful beaches.

It is difficult not to suspect that Morocco’s success in attracting both summering and settling Europeans will eventually outpace that of Turkey.



Tags:

How to get the most of a trip to Morocco



One of the most surprising thing about many of the visitors to Morocco is how little they know about the country they are visiting. A small amount of time doing research before you set out will assist any visitor in having a far more rewarding experience. Over the last few years we have assembled a vast amount of information about Morocco in general and Fez in particular. So - before you set out - check out the things that interest you. The View from Fez is fully searchable. For example; if your interest is in Sufi Music - then simply type the word Sufi in the search box at the lop left of this page. The results will come up and as you scroll down them you will come to a link marked "older posts" clicking on this will open up even more results for a Sufi search

Here are some of the most commonly searched for items:

Travel writing about Morocco

Accommodation
Sacred Music Festival
Moroccan Caftans

There are a lot of internet sites with practical tourist information such as maps of the Fez Medina and suggestions for sightseeing and so on and our links will also take you to some of the better ones. For restaurants you can see a guide here : Fez Restaurants or our listings with photographs Fez Food Guide




For those who are new to The View from Fez, we have hundreds of stories rangiing from renovation to culture, antiques to music and, of course, all the gossip and news.

If you are interested in buying property in Morocco or a riad in Fez, then it would be worthwhile browsing our Moroccan Property pages.

Lifestyle issues ( restaurants, bar guides and accomodation) can be found on The View from Morocco.

The free classified advertising pages are at ArtiZany

Other quick links:

  • Eating out in Casa

  • Eating out in Fez

  • Marrakech guide

  • Meknes bar guide

  • Tangier Bars

  • Rent a Fez Riad


  • Some basic contacts:

    Police-Emergencies phone number is 19
    For the Fire Brigade phone 15
    If you have a car breakdown or want to report an accident to the police - 177
    It is wise to post valuable articles from the Central Post Office · Grande Poste, on the corner of Avenue Mohammed V and Hassan II.
    There is an all-night pharmacy Av. Abdelkrim El Khattabi - Tel: 62.33.80
    Omar Drissi Hospital is in Place de l'Istiqlal (phone) 63.45.51
    For Ghassani Hospital phone 62.27.76 / 77
    Tourism Office · Place de la Résistance, Tel: 62.34.60 / 62.62.97
    Railway Station · Rue Imarate Arabia - Tel: 62.50.01
    Fès - Saïss Airport · Route d'Imouzzer - Tel: 62.47.12 / 62.43.00
    Royal Air Maroc · 52, avenue Hassan II - Tel: 62.04.56 / 57
    Renting a Riad in the Medina contact: http://www.fez-riads.com

    Tags:

    Saturday, July 05, 2008

    Beware ATMs in the Medina




    Many of us who have spent a long time living in the Medina are aware of the rogue cash machines that take your card but do not produce the cash - and when you check your bank statement you see that money has in fact gone. Thankfully this scam is less frequent these days. However a new threat has emerged. At certain ATM's in the Medina an accomplice will watch you take out money and then phone a thief who waits for you to appear in a quiet street. Recently this happened to Elizabeth. Here is her story..
    Talaa Sghira ATM, an ambush waiting to happen

    17th June at 1100 in the morning….I was putting the last things together before meeting my driver in an hour to take us to the airport….off to the UK .

    My partner went off for a quick haircut, and I considered waiting for him to come with me to the Banque Populaire ATM on Talaa Sghira, but as time was short, I decided to go ahead, alone.

    Whenever I have been to this ATM…my closest, I feel watched, and have varied my route home often, but on this occasion I chose the shortest route.

    The streets were busy, I took my money out….more money than usual to leave plenty for the carpenter needing to be paid while I was away, and made my way back through busy Souiot Bensafi, around the corner into Zkak Rowah, the street between the 2 Talaa’s, and turned the corner into Zkak el’Ma….

    Suddenly, I became aware of the street being totally empty, and the dark figure of a man came quickly towards me out of a dark doorway immediately on my left….he said nothing…took hold of my handbag which was firmly across my body.

    No way did I want this man to have my possessions and my money I was about to put in the bank on the way to the airport, and my passport!!!!!!!!! Oh No! my passport.
    .
    I MUST be on that plane and so I fought back. I was very strong in the tug of war, and my good quality travel handbag strap was holding up to the tussle…until he brought out a heavy piece of wood and began giving me a beating across my hands..thumbs and all along the left arm.

    My eyes were fixed on another man who just stood, watching the entire episode, ignoring my screams for help….I was OUTRAGED at what was happening as my experience in Morocco has been that people help their neighbours...and this man could see that I was being beaten brutally, and just watched!

    Eventually, realization struck that I had my British passport back home, and that I could still catch that plane out….so I let go, and off he ran around the corner and down into Ono Rowafi…which was teaming with life, and no-one tried to stop him, despite my screams.

    The cast is now set on my broken wrist and thumb, the bruises and lacerations on my arm are fading, and the right thumb is still very ugly, nail about to fall off. I cannot cradle my grand babies, and throw them over my shoulder as grandmothers love to do, but I am alive…

    THE LESSON IS - BE CAREFUL AND IF POSSIBLE NEVER GO TO AN ATM ALONE

    The View from Fez would like to thank Elizabeth for sharing her story.
    Photo credit: Lumen


    Tags:

    Morocco - tourist numbers up 11%



    Some 2.5 million tourists visited Morocco during the first five months of 2008, which represents an 11% increase compared to the same period in 2007, according to the latest figures of the National Tourism Observatory.

    French tourists topped the list with 927,000, followed by Spaniards (587,000), Britons (141,000), Italians (116,000), Belgians (113,000), Germans (97,000) and the Dutch (75,000).

    Despite a rise in tourist arrivals, overnight stays in rated hotels fell by 4%, standing at 6.7 million. The drop is ascribed to the uneven performance of the different tourist destinations of the kingdom.

    One statistic that the figures released do not show is the upsurge in interest in Morocco being shown by Americans. A couple of years ago the figures on The View from Fez revealed a lot of UK visitors. That has now slowed down (possibly because of the damage done by lack of direct flights to Fez) and been replaced by a large upsurge in interest from America. As the chart above shows, 24% of our visitors are Americans. This has been a consistent figure for several months now and it will be interesting to see if it translates into more actual tourists.

    After Suzanna Clarke's bestseller, A House in Fez, was released in Australia and New Zealand, guest house owners recorded an increase of visitors from those countries. We will be keeping an eye on the American visitor numbers after the book is released in the USA in November.

    Morocco seeks to attract 10 million tourists by 2010. To this end, it has elaborated an ambitious strategy dubbed "Vision 2010". According to official figures, a total of 7.4 million tourists visited the country in 2007, with overnight stays exceeding 17 million.

    Suzanna Clarke's , A House in Fez,

    Tags:

    Friday, July 04, 2008

    World Touring Car Championship for Morocco in 09



    The World Touring Car Championship will expand into its fourth continent in 2009 after confirming that Morocco will stage a street race in the city of Marrakech.

    The first time the country has hosted an international car race since the 1958 Morocco Grand Prix at Casablanca, the arrival of Marrakech marks the first time the WTCC has ventured into Africa too.

    A temporary street circuit will be erected in the centre of the ‘red city' for an event to be provisionally held on May 3rd 2009.

    Speaking at the launch of the event, President of the Marrakech Grand Prix, as it will be dubbed, Ali Horma, was delighted to be inviting motorsport back to the country after a 50 year absence.

    “This will be everybody's grand prix. We all have to work together to prove the world that Morocco can build a street circuit and organise a motorsport event according to the FIA standards. And to do this we need to mobilise all our resources. This event will have an unprecedented impact on Moroccan economy and tourism.”

    Tags:

    Tuesday, July 01, 2008

    Morocco swelters in heat wave.




    In the last few days Morocco was blasted by a searing heat wave which lasted all weekend and extended into Monday and Tuesday. Just as an example; at Safi, Monday's high reached 45 degrees Celsius (110 degrees F).

    Located on the coast, Safi is typically moderated by breezes off the Atlantic Ocean. However, winds the past few days have been from the east to northeast, preventing the ocean breeze from developing. To put these temperatures in comparison to normal, the average daily high at the end of June is 26 degrees C. Temperatures will soar above 37 degrees again before some cooler weather returns by the end of the week.

    This week in Fez expect 38 today and tops of around 37 for the remainder of the week. Night temperatures are dropping to between 16 and 17 degrees C.

    We suggest you go take a long cool shower under the stars



    Tags: