Thousands of people protested in Morocco on Sunday over constitutional reforms they said did not go far enough, but an official said they were out-numbered by people demonstrating in support of the changes.
Moroccan King Mohammed VI handed over some of his powers to elected officials in a referendum viewed in other Arab monarchies as a test case for whether reform can hold back the wave of “Arab Spring” uprisings sweeping the region.
The king’s reforms were endorsed by 98.5 percent of people who voted in the referendum on Friday, according to the interior ministry, but opponents say the figures were inflated.
Photo: Reuters
Protesters marched through a working class district of Tangier, about 450km north of the capital, chanting “The interior minister is a liar!”
They also carried empty boxes and shouted “Empty, empty, the ballot boxes were empty!”
A reporter estimated that the protesters in the Beni Mekada suburb of Tangier numbered about 10,000. However, an interior ministry official said there were only 1,000 opposition demonstrators in the city, while 3,000 protested in favor of the reform.
“We wanted to send a message that even after the fraudulent referendum, we are still here,” said Khalid Laasri, who was taking part in the opposition march.
There was no sign of uniformed police officers around the march.
The Feb. 20 opposition movement — inspired by uprisings which ousted leaders in Tunisia and Egypt — has been holding regular protests for months, but Sunday’s demonstrations were the first since the referendum.
Backers of the constitutional changes said they were a model for democratic reform in the Arab world. The result of the referendum was welcomed by the US and former colonial power France, which said it was “historic.”
Opponents said the changes did not go far enough because they left the palace in control of security, defense and religious issues, and did not tackle graft in the government.
“A farmer needs to clear stones and weeds before he plows the land. With this reform, we plow without ridding the country of corrupt people,” said Abdelali, a 42-year-old real estate entrepreneur in Tangier.
The majority of Moroccans revere the king and the protest movement has failed to gather the momentum or widespread support that toppled leaders in Egypt and Tunisia.
The Feb. 20 movement also organized demonstrations on Sunday in the capital, Rabat, and in Casablanca, Morocco’s biggest city. There were contradictory accounts of the numbers involved.
A reporter in Rabat said he saw about 4,000 protesters, with police keeping them apart from several hundred government supporters. The interior ministry official said the protesters numbered 1,500.
In Casablanca, Feb. 20 activists said 20,000 people turned out to protest the referendum. A local council member said there were 8,000 demonstrators, with a few hundred counter-protesters.
The interior ministry official said 20,000 people demonstrated in Casablanca in favor of the reform.
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