Thursday, 29 December 2011

Morocco's fish fight: High stakes over Western Sahara

                       Morocco's fishing is concentrated in what it calls its "southern provinces"

At Laayoune's bustling port fishermen unload hundreds of trawlers, packing silvery sardines onto ice and into refrigerated containers.
 
Across the sea to the south, the end of a 98km (61 mile) conveyor belt is just visible, delivering phosphate - a key ingredient in agricultural fertiliser - from an inland desert mine to cargo ships.

The fish and phosphate, along with possible reserves of oil and gas, underlie a territorial dispute in Western Sahara that has long been politically deadlocked.

The Moroccan government contends that they provide a basis for economic development, helping drag this desert region into the modern era.

But for Sahrawi activists who still dream of independence, these are the spoils of an illegal occupation that is partly sustained in order to allow further plundering of natural resources.

The argument has played out this week in the European Parliament in Strasbourg, where members voted down a fishing agreement between the European Union and Morocco amid objections that the deal was illegal.
                                             Moulay Hamdi Ould Errachid Mayor of Laayoune

 
'Living in luxury'

Morocco seized control of most of Western Sahara in 1976, following the departure of the former colonial power, Spain.

It refers to the territory it controls as its "southern provinces".

Officials in Laayoune, the largest city in the area, say it has been transformed from a "wasteland" dotted with destitute nomads to a network of towns connected to national transport, power and telephone grids.

"There is a road from Tangier to Senegal," says Laayoune's mayor, Moulay Hamdi Ould Errachid, reeling off evidence of investment in the region.

"There are schools, hospitals with specialist doctors, clean water, two desalination plants with a third on the way, a great port."

Indeed, officials say the area has benefited from more investment than the rest of Morocco.

The authorities have declared Laayoune and Boujdour to be "cities free from shanty towns", a declaration which though disputed, could not be made in Casablanca or other Moroccan cities further north.
Over the past 35 years, economic incentives have lured people from the north. These migrants, some of whom are ethnically Sahrawi, are now thought to outnumber indigenous inhabitants by as many as two to one.

Mr Ould Errachid, a Sahrawi dressed in traditional white and golden robes, says the split between indigenous people and settlers may be more even, whilst arguing that the influx was necessary for development.

"If we want to live just among Sahrawis, we would not have professors, doctors, pharmacists and engineers," he said.

He added that a range of programmes were in place to boost the level of employment among Sahrawis, and secure jobs for them in the phosphate and fishing industries.

But Sahrawi activists who oppose Moroccan rule say Morocco has settled Western Sahara in order to establish de facto control.

They complain of continuing social and economic discrimination.

"The Moroccan state uses pro-Moroccan Sahrawis, and they live in luxury of course," says Lahbib Salhi, a 63-year-old former employee of Phosboucraa, the state phosphate company.

"They can't do anything independently, so they act against the interests of indigenous citizens."

He added that despite official claims to the contrary, "reality shows that Sahrawis are marginalised".

                   Phosphate is exported from a conveyor belt said to be the longest in the world
 
Big public spending

Mr Salhi said Sahrawis at Phosboucraa were made to work longer for less money after Morocco took the company over, and that just a fraction of the employees were now Sahrawis.

Against any economic advantage for the Moroccan government has to be set the high level of public spending in the region.

The International Crisis Group estimated in 2007 that Morocco had sunk $2.4bn (£1.5bn) on basic infrastructure over 30 years and was spending about half its military budget in the region. It concluded that Moroccans were having "to shoulder an exorbitant financial cost that has hampered national development".

But Morocco talks of investments rather than costs, and phosphate and fishing are strategically important sectors. When prices boomed in 2008 phosphate accounted for 33% of the country's exports, earning 4.5bn euros (£3.8bn).

About 10% of national phosphate production comes from Western Sahara. If the territory was independent, it would provide local competition that might bring down global prices.

The fishing industry accounts for 6.5% of national jobs, and Morocco is aiming expand the value of the sector rapidly over the next eight years. Nearly 40% of the national catch comes from the region of Laayoune.
EU an 'accomplice'

Fishing has become the most politically sensitive industry in terms of the Western Sahara debate, largely because of a fishing agreement with between Morocco and the EU introduced in 2006.

The agreement, framed in a renewable annual protocol drawn up by the European Commission, cost 36m euros and gave access to more than 100 European boats.
Its s critics said it was poor value for money and environmentally damaging. They also said it was illegal because the UN does not recognise Morocco as having sovereignty over Western Sahara, and because it was not clear that the fishing deal benefited Sahrawi people.

Isabella Loevin of the Swedish Green Party told the European Parliament this week: "74% of the EU fleet capacity does operate in the waters of Western Sahara and the people of this region have not been consulted on the matter.

"It is extremely clear that Morocco only wants to keep the fisheries agreement with the EU for one reason - to legitimise Morocco's illegal occupation of Western Sahara by making the EU an accomplice in this criminal act."

Even a confidential 2010 Commission report obtained by the BBC called the first four years of the agreement "disappointing".

Morocco claimed it had created jobs and was environmentally sustainable. But MEPs rejected the deal in its current form by 326 votes to 296 on Wednesday, which will lead to its immediate suspension.

They voted instead for a new protocol that is economically, ecologically and socially sustainable, and that fully respects international law.

Back in Laayoune, Ismaili Mohamed Barek, 34, had been hoping for such an outcome. He did a six months of work experience on a fishing boat, but said that he and his fellow Sahrawis were offered nothing at the end of it.

"Fishing is dominated almost 100% by Moroccans," he said.

"Because of this we want to see the pillaging of Sahrawi wealth stop, and we want an end to the agreement with the EU."


Source :  By Aidan Lewis BBC News, Laayoune, 15 December 2011 Last updated at 10:27 GMT

Sunday, 18 December 2011

Morocco Mall, one of the five largest malls in the world


Morocco Mall, built on an area of 1,269 square meters, features 350 shops offering more than six hundred of the most sought-after international fashion and design brands, including Christian Dior, Louis Vuitton, Fendi, Ralph Lauren, Gucci, Mango, Zara, H&M, Prada, Guess, Lacoste, and GAP, among others.

The space also features forty restaurants offering spectacular views of the grounds; plus a musical fountain, only the third of its kind in the world; and an enormous cylindrical fish basin containing more than a million liters of water, which ranks third in the world behind Washington and Berlin.

The basin is filled with 3,000 nautical objects from around the world, on display to visitors by way of a panoramic elevator that ascends through the water.

Morocco Mall, one of the five largest malls in the world, is expected to receive more than fourteen million visitors a year with sales approaching five billion Dirhams (600 million US dollars).


The mall also includes a large cinema spanning on 1,000 square metres.

The project, which stretches on 10 hectares, cost two billion dirhams. It will create 21,000 indirect jobs, and 5,000 direct jobs.

Fourteen million people are expected to visit the mall annually, with a turnover of five billion dirhams.

Thursday, 1 December 2011

Islamist PJD party wins Morocco poll


Morocco's moderate Islamist Justice and Development Party (PJD) has won the most seats in Friday's parliamentary elections, final results confirm.

The interior ministry said the PJD took 107 out of 395 seats, giving it the right to lead a government.
Its likely coalition partner, the nationalist Istiqlal party, came second, with 60 seats.
The poll is part of reforms which King Mohamed VI hopes will defuse protests prompted by the Arab Spring.

"This is a clear victory, but we will need alliances in order to work together," PJD secretary-general Abdelilah Benkirane told the AFP news agency after the official results were announced.

Under a new constitution adopted in July, King Mohamed must now appoint the prime minister from the party which wins the most seats, rather than naming whomever he pleases.

But the king still has the final say on issues of defence, security and religion.

'Victory for democracy'

The BBC's Richard Hamilton says there high hopes for "genuine change"
Morocco's current Prime Minister, Abbas Al Fassi, said on Saturday his Istiqlal party was ready to enter into a coalition with the PJD.
"The PJD's victory is a victory for democracy," he told Reuters.
It comes a month after the moderate Islamist Ennahda party won elections in nearby Tunisia.
The PJD has said it will promote Islamic finance. However, it has avoided focusing on issues such as alcohol and headscarves for women, in a country which attracts large numbers of Western tourists.
Historian and political analyst Maati Monjib told the Associated Press that Moroccans linked Islam and political dignity.
"There is a big problem of dignity in the Arab world and the people see the Islamists as a way of getting out of the sense of subjugation and inferiority towards the West."

'Strong signal'
The Interior Ministry said 45.4% of the electorate had turned out to vote.
About 13.5 million Moroccans are eligible to vote. Although the turnout was an improvement on the 37% who took part in the 2007 election, it was less than the 51.6% in 2002.
The pro-reform February 20 movement, responsible for the protests staged just before the king announced his plans to reform the constitution, had called for a boycott of the vote.
"This [low turnout] sends a strong signal to authorities that Moroccans are not buying the proposed reforms," Najib Chawki, an activist with the movement, told Reuters.
 "We will not give up until our demands are met," he added.
Are you in Morocco? Are you planning to vote? Who are you going to cast your ballot for? Send us your comments.

Source : BBC, 27 November 2011 Last updated at 21:52 GMT