http://www.marxist.com/morocco-people-reject-constitution-of-slaves.htm

 Morocco: “The people reject the constitution of
slaves”<http://www.marxist.com/morocco-people-reject-constitution-of-slaves.htm>
Written by our correspondent in Morocco Monday, 28 March 2011
[image: 
Print]<http://www.marxist.com/morocco-people-reject-constitution-of-slaves/print.htm#>

*A new momentum has been reached by the protest movement in Morocco. The
call for a new Day of Action on March 20 was a test. Would the King’s
shadowy reforms succeed in demobilising the masses or on the contrary push
the movement forward? As we predicted the latter happened. Possibly twice as
many people came out on the streets than a month earlier.*

[image: March 20, Rabat. Photo: MarocStoun]
<http://www.marxist.com/images/stories/morocco/Mar_20_Rabat-MarocStoun.jpg>Demonstrations
were held in 64 cities and villages around the country. During the first Day
of Action on February 20, people mobilised in 52 cities and villages.
Between 400,000 and 600,000 people took part this time. The interesting
thing this time was that large numbers also turned in the big cities. In the
industrial capital Casablanca around 100,000 turned out in a particularly
militant march; in Rabat the figure was 30,000; in Tangiers, 50,000; Oujda,
30,000; Bengrir, 30,000; Agadir, almost 10,000; Nador, 4000; Chefchaouen,
4000; Tetuan, 3000; Ouarzazate, 1500; Azila, 1000, etc. In the city of Fez
even retired army soldiers joined the demonstration (See video
summary<http://mariamsrevolution.blogspot.com/2011/03/summary-of-events-in-morocco.html>).
The slogans were: “The people want the downfall of despotism”, “The people
reject the constitution of slaves”, “You can kill us, you can execute us,
but the people will always be reborn”, and so on.

One interesting detail in Casablanca was that the march took a different
route than the one during the earlier demonstration. It started in the
working class neighbourhood of Derb Omar. This choice of route was part of
the strategy of the 20F youth movement to seek closer links with the working
class neighbourhoods of the city. Thus students could join in with workers
and unemployed. This strategy expresses the growing maturity of the
movement. Not by accident did the demonstration in Casablanca attract much
higher numbers than the one a month earlier and it was also more militant.
Also remarkable was the fact that, apart from the desire for “regime
change”, the people in different cities protested against the French
multinational companies, Veolia and Suez who benefited from the
privatisation of local public water, electricity, transport, public lighting
and waste management companies. Earlier in Tangiers the local headquarters
of Veolia was burned down by angry protestors who rejected the price hikes
imposed by those companies. So we are seeing that the protest marches of 20M
also become a focal point for local social struggles.

The monarchist youth of the “9M youth movement” (referring to the date of
Mohamed VI’s latest speech) succeeded in only gathering a few hundred (390!)
supporters, despite massive media publicity. Their main slogan was “Long
live the King”. If anything, this reveals the real balance of power in the
country, a worrying signal for a regime where the popularity of the king is
practically an unquestionable “state dogma”. The attempt by the 2M state
television to present the protest as being infiltrated by the
fundamentalists of the Al Adl Wal Ihssane (Justice and Charity) movement of
Cheik Yassine is just laughable and was answered thus way by the organisers.
Doublespeak fools fewer and fewer people

[image: 
20Mposter]<http://www.marxist.com/images/stories/morocco/20Mposter.jpg>What
does the success of the March 20 Day of Action indicate? On the one side, it
revealed that the youth and the broader layers of demonstrators were not
fooled by the announcement of constitutional reform. They clearly understood
the King’s speech as a “tactical diversion” and well beneath what the
movement is demanding. On the other hand the very fact that Mohamed VI had
to appear on television and react to the growing movement was seen as a sign
of weakness on the part of the regime. This manoeuvre, rather than
weakening, emboldened the masses.

What also helped to understand the ‘tactical’ nature of the promised changes
was the brutal repression of a peaceful demonstration in Casablanca by the
police a week after the King’s speech (see
Youtube<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BModCvXnF4M&feature=player_embedded>).
The same regime that had promised more individual freedom came down very
hard on those who took this promise at face value. Now anyone who may have
hesitated or been confused by the King’s speech understood that the regime
was speaking with a forked tongue.

A few days earlier jobless protesters rioted at the offices of state-run
phosphate monopoly OCP in the central city of Khouribga. They reacted to the
brutal attempt of the police to dislodge their peaceful sit-in. The
unemployed men then invaded the OCP's administrative offices and damaged the
building's facade with stones, destroyed 11 vehicles and company
documentation (see Youtube
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CanS8uE5Ows>).Khouribga
is home to the country's biggest phosphate mine.

In another city, Taourirt, on March 21 the police also tried to dismantle a
tent camp. The camp had been set up by families to protest against their
exclusion from access to land to build homes. The local real estate mafia
and the administration are accused of working hand in hand to keep control
over the land. The police intervention was very brutal, with women and
children being beaten. The families and the local population reacted with an
insurrection in a part of the city. The house of the local mayor was also
attacked. The next day the political leaders of the city were forced to
announce an inquiry into the criminal activities of the mafia.

The state media, such as the 2M state TV channel, has also been affected by
the wave of protests. On March 18 the unions of the state TV workers
organised a sit-in in Casablanca to demand “public media at the service and
in the interests of the people and democracy”. This movement has taken firm
roots amongst the 2M staff and is getting wide support from other unions and
also from the 20F youth.
School students enter the movement

[image: Teachers occupying ministry]
<http://www.marxist.com/images/stories/morocco/teachersoccupyingministry.jpg>On
Wednesday, March 23 the school students decided to go on strike in many
schools in different cities. March 23 is not any date in the history of the
country. The school student action coincided deliberately with the beginning
of the Moroccan “May 68” on March 23 in 1965! Without doubt this widespread
revolutionary fervour is giving confidence to the different layers and
sections of oppressed to vent their grievances and push for their demands.
On the initiative of the school student group of the 20F movement,
demonstrations and strikes were organised in Imzouren (El Hoceima),
Ouarzazte, Rachidia, Beni Mellal, Inzgan (Agadir), Zagoura, Kheribga,
Chefchaouen, Tanger, Souk Larbae, Tetouan (See
video<http://lakome.com/videos/77-featured/3511-2011-03-23-16-13-12.html>).
Two school students were arrested in Chefchaouen and another in Tangier. The
school students are demanding the dismissal of the Minister of Education,
better quality education, free education, an increase in the number of
teachers, better infrastructure, more security in the schools and smaller
classes and the elimination of favouritism and nepotism. The following day
unionised teachers occupied the buildings of the Ministry of Education in
Rabat, the administrative capital, in protest at the education policy. Here
again their action was ferociously repressed with baton charges of the
police.

In general we can say that the beginning of the Moroccan revolution is being
accompanied by a marked increase in local or sector disputes. The political
movement for “regime change” is fuelling the social struggles which will
also push forward the 20F movement and influence its character. The thin
wall separating the economic and the political struggle is crumbling. The
regime is clearly on the defensive and trying to find new means and methods
to survive. But the movement is not going to let itself be fooled. Yesterday
(Sunday, March 27) there were many more demonstrations all over the country.
Revolution until the overthrow of the regime is the only realistic
perspective also in Morocco.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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