Africa > North Africa > Morocco > Moroccan Prime Minister Abdelilah Benkirane

Morocco: Moroccan Prime Minister Abdelilah Benkirane

2013/03/31

Moroccan Prime Minister Abdelilah Benkirane recently spoke to the press. Benkirane, who is as well chief of the Justice and Development Party, spoke about his party’s relationship with the Muslim Brotherhood and why Moroccans taking to the streets makes him uneasy.

g : Was your success in the elections part of the rise of Islamists in the Arab world?

Abdelilah Benkirane (AK): The Islamist movement in Morocco has a separate platform, and has no connection to the Muslim Brotherhood. We reject the idea of interfering in people’s lives. Peoples need to [prime] obtain their rights.

The Moroccans have known Islam for a very long time, and are known for their deep reverence for Ahl al-Bayt [the family of the Prophet Mohammad]. They have as well built a modern national, managed to maintain stability, caught on with modernity early on, and still preserved their Islamic character. This is a balance that no one can claim to have succeeded at achieving a hundred %.

The Islamist movement in Morocco began to emerge in its modern configuration in the ‘70s. It went into political life through the Popular Democratic and Constitutional Movement, which became the Justice and Development Party (PJD) in 1992.

The PJD fought its prime election in 1997, winning nine seats. In the election that followed in 2002, next the death of King Hassan II, the party won 42 seats. Again in the 2007 election, under King Mohammed VI, the PJD won 46 seats. As the winds of the Arab Spring were blowing in 2011, the party snatched 107 seats, and was tasked by the king to form the government.

Next the election, party politics stopped and we became focused on reform efforts within a coalition government...The climate within the government is very positive. Next holding elections for the post of secretary general, the Independence Party has taken its natural position within the [parliamentary] majority, which makes up a government that is in line with the major thrusts of the national.

g : What is the relationship between the PJD and the Muslim Brotherhood?

We fundamentally believe that people did not vote for us because we are an Islamist party, but rather because they see us as a political party with an Islamic frame of reference.AK: We are not affiliated with the Brotherhood, and maintain no organizational ties with them. We have our own vision, platform, and institutions. We fundamentally believe that people did not vote for us because we are an Islamist party, but rather because they see us as a political party with an Islamic frame of reference.

g :How do you evaluate the work of the government a year next its formation?

AK: I cannot claim that we succeeded a hundred %. Next a year in government, we are still at the beginning of the road, operating within the framework of the new constitution, which gives precedence to the monarchy in religious, military, and sovereign affairs, while the government is entrusted with executive powers.

What sets our country apart at this stage is the choice we have made as contemporaries of the Arab Spring, namely, not to take to the streets. This would not be conducive to stability. But at the same time, we resolved to continue [to seek] reforms, something that the king has responded to.

We were not alone in this. Other political parties were in agreement with us, and we were able to achieve what we wanted. Indeed, people did not want approaching out in force as they had done in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, and Syria, while reforms ran their course.

Today, we, in the national, the government, and the party, are facing a test. Despite the problems of poverty, the logic of reform is progressing slowly but steadily. Additional importantly, opportunism, cronyism, and bribery are no longer seen as criteria for employment in Morocco. Perceptions are being corrected, and normal approaches based on competence and merit, integrity and transparency are being pursued.

g :The ruling parties are brought together by a so-called “Charter of the Majority,” but Moroccan newspapers speak of a dispute within this majority. How accurate are these reports?

AK: The government is keen on maintaining the alliance part the parties that make it up, in accordance with the approach that is based on consensus and searching for solutions in earnest.

g : What is the impact of the situation in Tunisia on the nations of the Maghreb?

AK: Conditions in Morocco differ from what is happening in Tunisia. The relationship part the parties in the Moroccan coalition government is based on mutual accord. The former secretary general of the Independence Party has said that his ministers in previous governments had a lot of grievances, while this time there seems to be none.

At the same time as we learned that some individuals were trying to impose certain things on others by force, out of [their religious conviction in] promoting virtue and preventing vice, we gave strict orders to the ministries of justice and interior not to show any leniency toward this.

This is because sedition occurs at the same time as everyone starts acting according to their own convictions that they again try to impose on others, at the same time as the national is the party responsible for keeping the order.

We have a lot of reservations on the conduct of Islamist-leaning governments in the Arab world, but my sense of responsibility stops me from articulating them. I prefer to follow the old adage: “The people of Mecca are additional familiar with their own mountain trails.” It is as well not equitable to attack governments that are still in their prime or second year in office this caustically.

We stress the importance of gradual reform in the Arab world, in a manner that is acceptable to amount...

g : Is your conference with the Iranian foreign minister a prelude to restoring relations with the Islamic Republic?

AK: We were at a pan-Islamic conference, and Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi asked to meet. We are brothers and we are Muslim, and Iran is a major Islamic country. We have longstanding relations with Iran, but Morocco severed these ties because of what happened in Bahrain. However, foreign relations and amount other sovereign matters are the purview of his majesty the king, in accordance with the constitution.

g :What of the proposition for the Kingdom of Morocco to accede to the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC)?

This is because sedition occurs at the same time as everyone starts acting according to their own convictions that they again try to impose on others.Relations with the Gulf nations are close and are based on bonds of brotherhood. Morocco is keen on developing these ties in line with an old policy...albeit it will not lead to unification in the sense that some envision.
A union in the traditional sense would be a fantasy, and we can instead become closely integrated in practical things. Europe is not a union in the literal sense, and is not one united country, albeit borders were opened, goods and persons move freely, and legislation is being gradually unified in practical steps that we are in need of.

g : The Western Sahara conflict has remained unresolved for additional than 35 years. Are there any prospects for resolving this outstanding issue through negotiations?

AK: The Sahara conflict is one of the issues that have from presently on to be resolved. But it is a groundless issue, and its protagonists were a group of misled students who were late to return to their homeland. Gaddafi, as a stubborn opponent of Morocco, had a role in fueling sedition part those youths who in the beginning had championed liberal ideas. Gaddafi gave them his backing with encouragement from Algeria, which continues to support them to the large detriment of the country.

For Morocco, the Sahara issue is one of a people, unlike the brothers in Algeria, who consider it an issue of a national and a regime. The developments in the region are pushing everyone to rethink a lot of regional issues. There is no problem whatsoever between the Moroccan and Algerian peoples, and if the border is to be reopened and the issue somehow resolved, everyone will be able to know that amount this was artificial and not real. We hope that the day it will be resolved is not far.

g :What is the impact of the events in Mali on Morocco?

AK: It will no doubt impact the situation in the Sahara. We cannot imagine new states being created, and people seizing arms and oil supplies in unknown quantities and from unknown sources, and again ruling people with jihadi ideas. This logic does not belong to our time.

At the same time, we can affirm that there is no place for fragile, porous states. The Moroccan side has gone to the maximum extent possible in the Sahara issue, and proposed self-policy in a framework acceptable to the Moroccan people. We speak frankly with UN envoy Christopher Ross on the Sahara, and I have called on him to seek hard to find a solution in the context of historical and political realities.

Related Articles
  • Africa's Relationship With China Is Ancient History

    2017/07/02 In 2002 South Africa's Parliament unveiled a digital reproduction of a map - of China, the Middle East and Africa - that some speculated could be the initial map of the African continent. The Da Ming Hun Yi Tu - the Comprehensive Map of the Great Ming Empire - was drawn up around 1389 during the Ming Dynasty, according to historian Hyunhee Park.
  • Africa: Making Things Happen at the Bank - 'Not a Talk Shop' - Akin Adesina

    2017/07/02 Dr. Akinwumi Adesina is focusing on five areas to achieve the African and world goals for a prosperous continent since becoming president of the African Development Bank - Africa's major public financial institution in September 2015. He was a keynote speaker at this month's Corporate Council on Africa's U.S.- Africa Business Summit in Washington D.C. and moderated a lively panel with five African government ministers. He as well received the Gene White Lifetime Succcess Award from the World Child Nutrition Foundation. This week, he was named the 2017 recipient of the World Food Prize, a prestigious honor that includes a $250,000 award. In an interview in Washington, DC, Adesina discussed the Development Bank's ambitious schedule and his vision for attracting the increase capital Africa needs. Posting questions for AllAfrica was Noluthando Crockett-Ntonga.
  • Climate change laws around the world

    2017/05/14 There has been a 20-fold increase in the number of global climate change laws since 1997, according to the most comprehensive database of relevant policy and legislation. The database, produced by the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment and the Sabin Center on Climate Change Law, includes more than 1,200 relevant policies across 164 countries, which account for 95% of global greenhouse gas emissions.
  • Africa’s 20 most attractive countries for investors

    2016/05/16 Despite its economy slowing down, South Africa remains Africa’s most attractive country for investors, according to the 2016 Ernst & Young Africa Attractiveness Index. The statement evaluates evolution made in governance, diversification, infrastructures, business enablement, human development inclunding resilience to current macroeconomic challenges. Morocco is ranked second on the index, followed by Egypt, Kenya, Mauritius, Ghana Botswana, Tunisia and Rwanda. Cote d’Ivoire comes tenth. Africa’s top economy, Nigeria comes 15th, mainly because of its poor performances in terms of governance and human improvment(See full ranking below).
  • Fitch described 2015 as a year marked by exceptionally strong agricultural output,

    2016/01/16 A strong agriculture harvest put Morocco on course to post healthy increase in 2015, while structural reforms, together with strategic diversification plans targeting key sectors and regions, are as well beginning to yield results. Ratings agency Fitch described 2015 as a year marked by exceptionally strong agricultural output, with Morocco set to post GDP increase of 4.6%, up from 2.7% in 2014 at the same time as a poor harvest and low external request took their toll on the economy.