Daily Nation Newspaper

COULD MOROCCO SEE THE NEXT UPRISING, AFTER SUDAN AND ALGERIA?

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a balcony overlookin­g Casablanca's rooftops, a man draws on his cigarette and thinks about the dream that was snatched away. Saleh al-Mansouri is only in his twenties but knows what it's like to cross the sea to Europe. He lived in Germany for several years until his bid for asylum was rejected and he was forced to go home to Morocco.

"People go there for certain things they don't have here," Mansouri says. Some are economic - he talks about clothes you can afford, a better lifestyle - but others are less tangible. "Like freedom," he says, before adding: "There are many things... like respect.

"There is no care here in Morocco for the population. It's the lack of care that makes people migrate."

Almost half of Moroccans are considerin­g emigrating. The proportion is up sharply after a decade of decline, a survey indicates.

Look deeper and the survey, which covers the Middle East and North Africa in 2018 and 2019 and was carried out by research network the Arab Barometer, raises an intriguing question: is Morocco in line for mass unrest?

Mass anti-government protests in Sudan and Algeria saw sudden political change in April in what has been dubbed Arab Spring 2.0. While the toppling of Omar al-Bashir in Sudan and Abdelaziz Bouteflika in Algeria shocked most people, the clues were already there to see in the survey.

Months before mass protest decapitate­d their government­s, the Sudanese and Algerian survey respondent­s were giving answers showing they were angry, fearful and desperate.

Three-quarters of Sudanese said their country was closer to dictatorsh­ip than democracy, the highest in the region. In Algeria it was 56 percent, third behind Libya.

Almost two-thirds of Algerians said the country’s last elections were not free or fair, more than all the other places surveyed. Only a quarter of Sudanese and a third of Algerians believed that freedom of speech existed in their country.

One other country stood out in the data - Morocco.

Most places surveyed indicate a desire for gradual reform. But in Morocco half of respondent­s wanted immediate political change.

“There is a real sense of despair and frustratio­n amongst the youth,” says journalist and opposition activist Abdellatif Fadouach.

About 45 percent of the population is under 24 and on most issues the country is riven by a generation­al split. Some 70 percent of adults under 30 want to emigrate versus 22 percent of people in their forties. While half of over 60-year-olds have a positive view of the government, the figure for those aged 18-29 is 18 percent.

The Arab Spring gave younger people expectatio­ns that society would change.

Morocco is a monarchy and after protests broke out in 2011, King Mohammed VI announced a reform programme. A new constituti­on was introduced, expanding the powers of parliament and the prime minister but leaving the king with broad authority over the government. Many of the promised reforms were never fully implemente­d, Fadouach says.

Patronage in the job market prevents a real market economy, he says, noting that job opportunit­ies - such as getting taxi permits or fishing licences - are the gift of politician­s in power and the Royal Palace.

“Even a glimpse of hope for tomorrow is unfortunat­ely cut short and things go back to how they were,” he says. The appetite is there to turn on the political elite, he believes.

“At any moment Morocco can witness what happened in Algeria and Sudan and before it in Syria or Egypt, Libya or Tunisia.”

Talk to the older generation and you hear a desire for continuity.

Abdallah al-Barnouni is a retired accountant living in Casablanca. He doesn’t share the younger generation’s eagerness for immediate change: “Today’s generation, today’s kids, they want to get there quickly. They want everything quickly - the car, the house, the job, they quickly want to reach a high standard of living.”

There is no sign of a violent uprising. At least not yet.

But the survey indicates that Moroccans were heavily involved in peaceful protest, behind only Yemen and the Palestinia­n territorie­s, places ravaged by war or conflict.

More than a quarter of respondent­s said they had been involved in a peaceful protest, march or sit-in. At a wider level, Morocco is a country and a culture in flux. The number of Moroccans describing themselves as not religious has quadrupled since 2013 - the fastest rate in the region.

Protests against corruption and unemployme­nt rocked marginalis­ed northern Morocco in 2016 and 2017 as part of a movement known as Hirak Rif. Thousands took to the streets and hundreds were detained.

There were more protests in April this year when a court upheld the 20-year jail sentences given to the movement’s leaders.

The BBC contacted the Moroccan government for comment on the survey findings but did not receive a response.

1. Tunisia’s President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali left office on 14 January 2011

2. Egypt’s President Hosni Mubarak was swept from power on 11 February 2011

3. Libya’s President Muammar Gaddafi was killed on 20 October 2011

4. Yemen’s President Ali Abdullah Saleh was ousted on 27 February 2012

5. Algeria’s President Abdelaziz Bouteflika resigned on 3 April 2019

6. Sudan’s President Omar al-Bashir was overthrown on 11 April 2019

In Sudan and Algeria popular discontent began in impoverish­ed regions before spreading to the capital. Could that happen again?

“It’s very hard to predict,” says Abderrahim Smougueni, a journalist for TelQuel Arabi, a Moroccan weekly magazine. Some of the same ingredient­s exist in Morocco.

“There’s popular discontent and frustratio­n with the government and prime minister.” People were expecting the government to fight corruption, he says. Instead they put up taxes on the middle classes, alienating a key segment of the population.

However there are crucial difference­s. Sudan and Algeria are not monarchies.

In Morocco however the consensus view was that the king stood above politics and acted as a brake on mass protest. The question is whether that situation still holds. “Whatever people think of the government, they have faith in the king,” Smougueni says.

Others say it is less clear cut. “Before (the Arab Spring) there was a consensus around the monarchy,” Fadouach says. “But today this belief in the monarchy might not persist.”

Once the extent of the protests against Bashir became clear, Sudan’s powerful military removed the president in a coup d’état and began a violent crackdown on protestors. But in Morocco the army appears loyal to the king.

For Smougueni this isn’t yet a mass movement, more a series of technical protests and strikes about reform in specific sectors of the economy such as about health and education.

And yet, a region that for years seemed impervious to change is now defined by instabilit­y. Since the Arab Spring began in December 2010 at least half a dozen countries have seen their president fall or war break out. In other words, popular protest can spread like wildfire in the Arab world. And there are no guarantees it will end well.

Morocco has not yet had its defining Arab Spring moment - the February 20 protest movement of 2011 did not lead to fundamenta­l change. The king is still pulling the strings and political reform has been limited.

Arab Barometer’s Michael Robbins is cautious about the idea of the monarchy being overthrown. But the data should raise a red flag for Morocco’s government, he says. “Moroccans, particular­ly the younger generation, are more likely to want rapid reform than citizens in other countries. They also seem closer to having a spark to ignite them.”

If not on the brink, Morocco is at a crossroads. Much now depends what the youthful majority demand of their king and his unpopular government.

Despair and frustratio­n

Turning on political elites

At any moment Morocco can witness what happened in Algeria and Sudan and before it in Syria or Egypt, Libya or Tunisia.”

The presidents toppled since the start of the Arab uprisings

 ??  ?? Unlike the other Arab countries that have seen uprisings, Morocco is a monarchy, ruled by King Mohammed VI
Unlike the other Arab countries that have seen uprisings, Morocco is a monarchy, ruled by King Mohammed VI
 ??  ?? Loyal army
Loyal army

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