Morocco’s king has dismissed several ministers and top officials “for
failing to improve the economic situation in a region” amid protests.
Morocco’s King Mohammed IV dismissed the ministers of education,
planning and housing and health, as well as other officials, after an
economic agency found “imbalances” in implementing a development plan,
state news agency MAP reported, citing a palace statement.
According to an official investigation committee set up by the king
in June a large-scale development program in Al Hoceima launched in 2015
were lingering due to delays.
Protests erupted in the Rif region around the northern city of
Al-Hoceima last October, triggered by the death of a fishmonger whose
produce was confiscated by police.
The man’s crushing to death in a garbage truck during a confrontation
with police became a symbol of corruption and official abuse.
Protests, also fuelled by economic underdevelopment, continued in Morocco in 2017.
Political protests are rare in Morocco, where the palace remains the ultimate power.
The protests, the largest in Morocco since the days of the 2011 “Arab
Spring”, were directed at the government and the king’s entourage
rather than the monarch himself.
The king’s move came as protest leader Nasser Zefzafi and 29 others
accused of organizing demonstrations in the northern region went on
trial in Casablanca.
They face charges ranging from conspiring against the state to
protesting without authorization. Zefzaki’s lawyer told Reuters he could
be sentenced to death in a worst-case scenario.
The judge adjourned the session until Oct 31. Zefzaki’s supporters
protested in front of the court while some 70 lawyers attended the
trial.
The protest movement was born after Fikri’s death.
Police confiscated fish they said he had bought illegally and dumped
it in a garbage truck. Desperate to recover his stock, Fikri jumped
inside and was killed by a rubbish crusher.
In July the king pardoned dozens of people arrested in the protests
and blamed the failure of local officials to quickly implement
development projects for stoking public anger.
Culled
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