Salah al-Din Abu al-Ghali, a member of the collective leadership of the Contemporary Assala Party, said that the positive outcome achieved by the government and the decisive development in Morocco in many areas “should not hide from us the persistence of unacceptable social manifestations and imbalances in today’s Morocco.”
Abu Al-Ghali added, in a speech on behalf of the collective leadership in the National Council of the Authenticity and Modernity Party, held today, Saturday, at the Palace of Conferences in the city of Salé: “We say it with all sincerity to ourselves and to our fighters first, and to all those who are jealous of our homeland secondly; This is because, despite the tremendous pace of development and development that has characterized the past two decades, the conviction of our country, the king and the people, is that the pace of change is still slow.
The leader of the second party participating in the government added that major reforms “sometimes do not reflect a change in the living reality of many social groups that are still drowning in fragility and suffering from the scarcity and poor services of public facilities,” considering that this matter was revealed by the Al Haouz earthquake and before it was a report. The new development model.
Abu Al-Ghali went on to criticize, “Some public policies directed at vulnerable social groups, such as women in the rural world, children, and people with special needs, are still of limited effectiveness, and many mountainous regions are still suffering from lack of development,” pointing out that manifestations of rent-seeking and corruption “still exist in many areas.” areas, including the political field.”
The collective leadership of the “Jarrar” Party, in its speech before members of the party’s parliament, considered that the “exacerbation” of the phenomenon of international depletion of our energies and qualified human resources and other challenges “impose on us in the party more mobilization and effort, both at the level of creating renewed intellectual perceptions and positions on these issues.” Or by restructuring our elites and elected officials in the party to deal with it with all responsibility and seriousness.”
Abu Al-Ghali also pointed out that the achievements achieved by the government are accompanied by “a feeling of unfairness and the government’s recognition of this reality encourages the continuation of the path of reform,” noting that there is “harshness in superficial, populist rulings; Rather, with all regret, we have begun to see that these new trivialities are spreading abhorrent melancholy and totalitarian hatred, and have begun to destroy the components of citizenship education and sometimes affect the values of popular cohesion and solidarity,” referring to the criticism of government performance by the opposition.
Meanwhile, Abu Al-Ghali stressed that the Authenticity and Modernity Party believes that this stage must be a station “to re-radiate the human rights file in our country.” By focusing on addressing many outstanding situations in the field of human rights, especially at the level of women’s and children’s rights.”
The same leader called for an end to “the hesitation in approving individual and collective freedoms within the new draft criminal law, and openness to international conventions and civilizational experiences,” adding that this matter should be done within the framework of “full respect for the values that unite us as a Moroccan nation, whose foundations are Islam, Arabism, Amazighism, and Sahrawiism.” Hassaniyya, strengthened by African, Andalusian, Hebrew and Mediterranean cultural sources, as enshrined in the Kingdom’s Constitution.”
The same spokesman praised “the genius of King Mohammed VI, who established a balanced composition for the Family Code review body,” and considered it “the best evidence of the school of moderation, openness, and participation that our country adopts in discussing its strategic human rights issues,” stressing that “there is no fear for our country’s legal future, nor any fear.” This society, which clings to its constitutional constants and has accumulated values and authentic education over centuries, does not need anyone today to protect it or restrict its mind and thought,” in a clear allusion to Abdelilah Benkirane and the conservative movement in Morocco.
#governments #positive #outcome #accompanied #unacceptable #imbalances
2024-05-13 01:13:07

