Project on Middle East Democracy

Project on Middle East Democracy
The POMED Wire


Morocco: Reforming Through Decentralization?

January 5th, 2010 by Josh

On January 4, King Mohammed IV of Morocco announced his intention to establish an “Advisory Committee” which will be tasked with drafting legislation to “give regional authorities more power to determine their own paths to development based on local conditions.” Magharebia reports that the committee, led by Morocco’s Ambassador to Spain, Omar Azzamine, will “find ways to boost the power of regions so they can effectively contribute to Morocco’s socio-economic and cultural development.”

Supplementing this announcement is an Al-Arabiya report on a partial reshuffling of the Moroccan cabinet. In a statement to the media, the royal council linked the new appointments — the most significant of which are in the Ministries of Justice and Interior — to the aforementioned Advisory Committee initiative, claiming that the cabinet shake-up would “give greater momentum to major development projects and structural institutional reforms.”


Posted in Algeria, Democracy Promotion, Freedom, Human Rights, Middle Eastern Media, Morocco, North Africa, Reform |

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One Response to “Morocco: Reforming Through Decentralization?”

  1. Welcome | Project on Middle East Democracy Says:

    […] James Liddell has updated our Morocco country page with specifics on the cabinet reshuffle that we mentioned here last week.  James includes the names of specific appointees to key cabinet posts and digs beneath […]

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