Washington - Morocco’s political and economic reform process draws its strength from the centuries-old legitimacy of the Monarchy, which is rooted in the social fabric of the Kingdom, said a report presented Thursday in Washington by US think-tank Atlantic Council.
Washington – Morocco’s political and economic reform process draws its strength from the centuries-old legitimacy of the Monarchy, which is rooted in the social fabric of the Kingdom, said a report presented Thursday in Washington by US think-tank Atlantic Council.
While North African countries erupted in violent protests in January 2011 (…) Morocco has navigated its way out of the storm of the so-called Arab Spring without significant political upheaval or damage to its economy, the report, titled “Morocco’s Gradual Political and Economic Transition, said.
The process of progressive reforms was designed to address two primary goals: putting an end to human rights abuses and improving the status of women within both the family and society, pointed out the report carried out by Mohsin Khan and Karim Mezran, senior fellows at the Atlantic Council’s Rafik Hariri Center for the Middle East.
They underlined that these reforms are emblematic of a virtuous dynamics that has evolved in the promulgation of the 2011 Constitution that the Sovereign proposed to the Moroccan people, noting that the 2011 Constitution is part of the reforms initiated by the Sovereign since His enthronement.
MWN with MAP