Thousands march in Morocco to protest worsening economic conditions and oppression
Thousands march in Morocco to protest worsening economic conditions and oppression
Thousands marched on December 4 in Rabat against soaring prices of basic goods including food and fuel. The protest also drew attention to the attacks on freedom of expression, public services, and labor rights
The party also condemned the government’s “reactionary measures, procedures, and policies aimed at enriching the wealthy and impoverishing the poor,” especially the government’s Finance Bill which would give “tax gifts to large companies in exchange for fiscal pressure on small and medium enterprises and owners.”
Joining the protest call, the National Association of Lawyers in Morocco added that the bill would deepen the suffering of the Moroccan people. It also criticized the marginalization of public services, especially education and health, and the targeting of several groups including lawyers.
“Morocco is not a poor country, but rather has a variety of resources, including marine, fishery, and mineral resources, or even phosphate, which is enormous wealth for Moroccans,” a protestor told Moroccan news outlet Hespress. “The alternative is to build a democratic state that distributes wealth fairly to the people.”
Tayeb Modad, a member of the Moroccan Association of Human Rights (AMDH), stated that the national march was organized in the context of “the real crisis” that the country was going through with attacks on the “rights and freedoms and daily subsistence of citizens.”
In addition to the economic demands, protestors also spoke out against “all forms of repression including political and anti-union repression, attacks on the freedom of expression, and the imprisonment of journalists, activists and critics of the government.”
The Palestinian flag was on prominent display during Sunday’s protest. Activists have repeatedly rejected the kingdom’s normalization of ties with Israel.
In a statement, the National Federation of the Agricultural Sector and the Moroccan Labor Union (UMT) also raised key demands including a revision of the government’s Finance Bill, measures to control rising prices of basic goods, an increase in wages along with development of agriculture and betterment of the condition of workers in the sector, an alternative democratic agricultural policy, and food sovereignty.
The National Network for Labor Rights denounced that labor rights which are at the “heart of social rights” are facing a “sweeping capitalist attack led by international financial institutions,” with the support of the government and state institutions.
It noted the deterioration of working conditions in the country, especially in terms of health and safety, with an increase in work-related accidents. It also denounced the escalation in repression of trade unions by employers, a “practical ban” on trade union work in industrial and agricultural sectors and “free zones,” and the criminalization of the right to strike.
Left-wing forces in Morocco have been demanding the protection of rights including the freedom of expression, association, peaceful assembly, and union action. Organizations including FSM and the National Network for Labor Rights have also condemned the lack of true social dialogue in the country and the government’s disregard towards the popular demands of the working class and the unemployed.
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https://peoplesdispatch.org

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