Difference between revisions of "Morocco" - New World Encyclopedia

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{{Approved}}{{Submitted}}{{Images OK}}{{Paid}}{{Copyedited}}
 
{{Infobox Country
 
{{Infobox Country
|native_name             = المملكة المغربية<br>Al-Mamlaka al-Maghribiya
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|native_name = {{native name|ar|المملكة المغربية|italic=no}}<br />{{native name|ber|ⵜⴰⴳⵍⴷⵉⵜ ⵏ ⵍⵎⴰⵖⵔⵉⴱ|italic=no}}
 
|conventional_long_name  = Kingdom of Morocco
 
|conventional_long_name  = Kingdom of Morocco
 
|common_name              = Morocco
 
|common_name              = Morocco
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|image_coat              = Coat of arms of Morocco.png
 
|image_coat              = Coat of arms of Morocco.png
 
|image_map                = LocationMorocco striped.png
 
|image_map                = LocationMorocco striped.png
|national_motto          = الله، الوطن، الملك<br>(Allāh, al Waţan, al Malik; "God, Country, King")
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|map_caption              = The fully green area shows the internationally recognized territory of '''Morocco'''. The striped area is the [[Morocco#Western Sahara status|disputed]] territory of [[Western Sahara]]; Morocco administers most of this territory as its ''[[de facto]]'' [[Southern Provinces]].
|national_anthem          = [[Hymne Chérifien]]
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|national_motto          = {{lang|ar|الله، الوطن، الملك}} (Arabic)<br />''{{transl|ar|Allāh, al-Waṭan, al-Malik}}''<br />{{lang|ber|ⴰⴽⵓⵛ . ⴰⵎⵓⵔ . ⴰⴳⵍⵍⵉⴷ}} (Berber)''<br />{{lang|ber-Latn|Akuc, Amur, Agellid}}<br />"God, Homeland, King"
|official_languages      = - [[Arabic language|Arabic]]<br/> - [[French language|French]] widely used<br/>as a [[second language]]<br/> - [[Amazigh language|Amazigh]] and [[Moroccan Arabic]] widely spoken but not official
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|national_anthem          = '''النشيد الوطني المغربي'''<br/>"[[Cherifian Anthem]]"
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|official_languages      = [[Arabic]],<ref>Lahcen Achy, [https://latimesblogs.latimes.com/babylonbeyond/2011/06/morocco-reform-can-lead-to-a-genuine-constitutional-monarchy.html Morocco: Reform as a path to a genuine constitutional monarchy] ''Los Angeles Times'', June 7, 2011. Retrieved February 15, 2022.</ref> [[Berber language|Berber]]<ref>[https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-13816974 Morocco's King Mohammed unveils constitutional reforms] ''BBC News'', June 18, 2011. Retrieved February 15, 2022.</ref>{{Ref label |Official languages|a|}}
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| languages_type          = Native languages
 +
|languages                = [[Moroccan Arabic]], [[Tachelhit]], [[Central Atlas Tamazight]] [[Tarifit]], [[Hassānīya language|Hassaniya]].
 +
|ethnic_groups            = Arab-Berber 99%, other 1% <ref>CIA, [https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/countries/morocco/#people-and-society Morocco] ''World Factbook''. Retrieved February 15, 2022.</ref>
 +
|demonym                  = Moroccan
 
|capital                  = [[Rabat]]
 
|capital                  = [[Rabat]]
|latd=34|latm=02|latNS=N|longd=6|longm=51|longEW=W
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|latd=34 |latm=02 |latNS=N |longd=6 |longm=51 |longEW=W
 
|largest_city            = [[Casablanca]]
 
|largest_city            = [[Casablanca]]
|government_type          = [[Constitutional monarchy]]
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|government_type          = [[Unitary state|Unitary]] [[parliamentary democracy]] and [[Constitutional Monarchy]]
 
|leader_title1            = [[King of Morocco|King]]
 
|leader_title1            = [[King of Morocco|King]]
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|leader_name1            = [[Mohammed VI of Morocco|Mohammed VI]]
 
|leader_title2            = [[Prime Minister of Morocco|Prime Minister]]
 
|leader_title2            = [[Prime Minister of Morocco|Prime Minister]]
|leader_name1             = [[Mohammed VI of Morocco|Mohammed VI]]
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|leader_name2             = [[Aziz Akhannouch]]
|leader_name2            = [[Driss Jettou]]
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|legislature=[[Parliament of Morocco|Parliament]]
|area_rank                = 57th
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|upper_house=[[Assembly of Councillors]]
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|lower_house=[[Assembly of Representatives of Morocco|Assembly of Representatives]]
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|sovereignty_type        = Monarchy
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|sovereignty_note        = 110 B.C.E.
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|established_event1      = [[Mauretania|Kingdom of Mauretania]]
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|established_date1        = 110 B.C.E. – 40 C.E.
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|established_event2      = [[Alaouite dynasty]]
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|established_date2        = 1666–modern day
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|established_event3      = [[Independence]] from France
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|established_date3        = March 2, 1956
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|established_event4      = [[Independence]] from Spain
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|established_date4        = April 7, 1956
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|area_rank                = 58th/40th
 
|area_magnitude          = 1_E10
 
|area_magnitude          = 1_E10
|area                    = 446,550
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|area_footnote            ={{Ref label |territory|b|}} or 710,850&nbsp;km²{{Ref label |territory|b|}}
|areami²                  = 172,414 <!--Do not remove per [[WP:MOSNUM]]—>
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|area_km2                = 446,550
|percent_water            = negligible
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|area_sq_mi              = 172,487 <!--Do not remove per [[WP:MOSNUM]]—>
|population_estimate     = 31,478,000
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|percent_water            = 250&nbsp;km² (0,056%)
|population_estimate_year = 2005
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| population_estimate   = 37,345,000<ref name="Knoema">[https://knoema.com/atlas/Morocco/Population Morocco - Total population] ''Knoema''. Retrieved February 15, 2022.</ref>
|population_estimate_rank = 37th
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| population_estimate_year = 2021
|population_census       =  
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| population_estimate_rank = 39th
|population_census_year   =  
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| population_census     = 33.848.242<ref name=HCP>[http://rgphentableaux.hcp.ma/ Population légale] ''Haut Commissariat au Plan'' (HCP). Retrieved February 15, 2022. </ref>
|population_density      = 70
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| population_census_year = 2014
|population_densitymi²    = 181 <!--Do not remove per [[WP:MOSNUM]]—>
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| population_density_km2 = 50.0
|population_density_rank = 122nd
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| population_density_sq_mi = 189.3 <!--Do not remove per [[WP:MOSNUM]]—>
|GDP_PPP_year            = 2005
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| population_density_rank =  
|GDP_PPP                 = $135.74 billion <!--IMF—>
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| GDP_PPP               = $332.358&nbsp;billion<ref name="imf"> Morocco ''IMF''.</ref> <!--Do not edit!—>
|GDP_PPP_rank             = 54th
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| GDP_PPP_year          = 2019
|GDP_PPP_per_capita       = $4,503
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| GDP_PPP_rank           =  
|GDP_PPP_per_capita_rank = 109th
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| GDP_PPP_per_capita     = $9,339<ref name=imf/>
|HDI_year                = 2003
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| GDP_PPP_per_capita_rank =  
|HDI                      = 0.631
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| GDP_nominal            = $122.458&nbsp;billion<ref name=imf/>
|HDI_rank                = 124th
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| GDP_nominal_year      = 2019
|HDI_category            = <font color="#ffcc00">medium</font>
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| GDP_nominal_rank      =  
|sovereignty_type        = [[Independence]]
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| GDP_nominal_per_capita = $3,441<ref name=imf/>
|established_event1      = From [[France]]
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| GDP_nominal_per_capita_rank =  
|established_event2      = From [[Spain]]
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| Gini                  = 40.3<ref>[https://read.oecd-ilibrary.org/development/africa-s-development-dynamics-2018_9789264302501-en#page18 Africa's Development Dynamics 2018:Growth, Jobs and Inequalities] ''AUC/OECD''. Retrieved February 15, 2022. </ref> <!--number only—>
|established_date1        = [[March 2]], [[1956]]
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| Gini_year              = 2015
|established_date2        = [[April 7]], [[1956]]
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| Gini_ref              =  
|currency                = [[Moroccan dirham|Dirham]]
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|currency                = [[Moroccan dirham]]
 
|currency_code            = MAD
 
|currency_code            = MAD
|time_zone                = [[Coordinated Universal Time|UTC]]
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|time_zone                = [[Western European Time|WET]]
 
|utc_offset              = +0
 
|utc_offset              = +0
|time_zone_DST            = [[Coordinated Universal Time|UTC]]
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|time_zone_DST            = [[Western European Summer Time|WEST]]
|utc_offset_DST          = +0
+
|utc_offset_DST          = +1
 +
|drives_on                = right
 
|cctld                    = [[.ma]]
 
|cctld                    = [[.ma]]
|calling_code            = 212
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|calling_code            = [[+212]]
|footnotes                = All data excludes Western Sahara, much of which Morocco is also in ''de facto'' military and administrative control. Morocco views this area as its "[[Southern Provinces]]", though this is disputed by the [[United Nations]]. The UN holds that Western Sahara is a non-[[decolonization|decolonized]] territory belonging to the [[Sahrawi]] people, still awaiting a [[Right to self-determination|decision]] on its final status. Morocco has suggested an [[Autonomy|autonomous]] status for the territory.
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|footnotes                =  
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a. {{note|Official languages}} [[French language|French]] is also used in official government documents and by the business community, although it has no official status. <br />
 +
 
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b. {{note|territory}} {{convert|446550|km2|sqmi|abbr=on}} excludes all disputed territories.<br /> {{convert|710850|km2|sqmi|abbr=on}} Includes Moroccan-administered territory of [[Western Sahara]] which is claimed by the [[Polisario Front]] as the [[Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic|Sahrawi Republic]]
 
}}
 
}}
{{otheruses}}
 
The '''Kingdom of Morocco''' ([[Arabic]]: '''المملكة المغربية''') is a country in [[North Africa]]. It has a long coastline on the [[Atlantic Ocean]] that reaches past the [[Strait of Gibraltar]] into the [[Mediterranean Sea]]. It borders [[Algeria]] to the east, the Mediterranean Sea and a relatively thin water border [[Spain]] to the north and the Atlantic Ocean to its west. The border to the south is disputed. Morocco claims ownership of [[Western Sahara]] and has administered most of the territory since 1975.
 
  
Morocco, a [[constitutional monarchy]], is the only African country that is not currently a member of the [[African Union]]. However, it is a member of the [[Arab League]], [[Arab Maghreb Union]], [[Organization of the Islamic Conference]], [[Mediterranean Dialogue]] group, and [[Group of 77]], and is a [[major non-NATO ally]] of the [[United States]].
 
  
==Name==
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The '''Kingdom of Morocco''' is a country in [[North Africa]]. The full Arabic name of the country ''(Al-Mamlaka al-Maghribiya)'' translates to ''The Western Kingdom.'' ''Al Maghrib'' (meaning ''The West'') is commonly used. Historians used to refer to Morocco as ''Al Maghrib al Aqşá'' ''(The Furthest West),'' referring to its location at the northwestern tip of the continent, bordering both the [[Atlantic Ocean]] and the [[Mediterranean Sea]].
The full [[Arabic language|Arabic]] name of the country ('''Al-Mamlaka al-Maghribiya''') translates to ''The Western Kingdom''. '''Al Maghrib''' (meaning ''The West'') is commonly used. For historical references, historians used to refer to Morocco as '''Al Maghrib al Aqşá''' (''The Furthest West''), disambiguating it from the historical region called the [[Maghreb]]. The name '''Morocco''' in many other languages originates from the name of the former capital, [[Marrakech]]. The Berber/Amazigh word '''Murakush''' means '''Land of God'''.
 
  
==History==
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Morocco is an ethnically diverse country with a rich culture and civilization. Though Morocco hosted many peoples over the centuries, from the ancient [[Phoenicia]]ns to modern-day [[France]], its [[Berber]] population retained its identity, retreating to the mountains when necessary.
{{main|History of Morocco}}
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{{toc}}
The area of modern Morocco has been inhabited since [[Neolithic|Neolithic times]], at least 8000 B.C.E., as attested by signs of the [[Capsian culture]], in a time when the [[Maghreb]] was less arid than it is today. Many theorists believe the [[Berber languages|Berber language]] probably arrived at roughly the same time as agriculture (see [[Berber]]), and was adopted by the existing population as well as the immigrants that brought it. Modern genetic analyses have confirmed that various populations have contributed to the present-day population, including, in addition to the main ethnic groups - [[Berbers]] and [[Arabs]] - [[Phoenicia]]ns, [[Sephardic]] [[Jew]]s, and [[sub-Sahara]]n [[Africa]]ns. The Berbers, often referred to in modern ethnic activist circles as "Amazigh," are more commonly known as Berber or by their regional ethnic identity, such as [[Chleuh]]. In the classical period, Morocco was known as [[Mauretania]], although this should not be confused with the modern country of [[Mauritania]].
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The king is viewed as spiritual leader of the country and dominates political life as well. In the past decade, he has introduced a number of reforms in the areas of human rights, the status of women, and economic liberalization. These reforms are in some ways ahead of its Arab neighbors.
  
===Roman and sub-Roman Morocco===
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==Geography==
North Africa and Morocco were slowly drawn into the wider emerging [[Mediterranean]] world by Phoenician trading colonies and settlements in the late Classical period. The arrival of Phoenicians heralded a long engagement with the wider Mediterranean, as this strategic region formed part of the [[Roman Empire]], as [[Mauretania Tingitana]]. In the 5th century, as the Roman Empire declined, the region fell to the [[Vandal]]s, [[Visigoth]]s, and then [[Byzantine Empire|Byzantine Greek]]s in rapid succession. During this time, however, the high mountains of most of modern Morocco remained unsubdued, and stayed in the hands of their Berber inhabitants.
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[[Image:Morocco waterfall.jpg|thumb|left|300px|Ouzoud Falls]]
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At 172,402 square miles (446,550 sq. km), Morocco is comparable in size to [[Iraq]] and somewhat larger than the U.S. state of [[California]]. It has a long coastline on the [[Atlantic Ocean]] that reaches past the [[Strait of Gibraltar]] into the [[Mediterranean Sea]]. Morocco borders [[Algeria]] to the east, the Mediterranean Sea and a relatively thin water border with [[Spain]] to the north and the Atlantic Ocean to its west. Because Morocco controls part of the Strait of Gibraltar, it has power over the passage in and out of the Mediterranean. The border to the south is disputed. Morocco claims ownership of [[Western Sahara]] and has administered most of the territory since 1975.  
  
===Early Islamic Morocco===
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There are four [[Spain|Spanish]] enclaves on the Mediterranean coast: Ceuta, Melilla, Peñón de Vélez de la Gomera, Peñón de Alhucemas, as well as the Chafarinas islands and the disputed islet Perejil. Off Morocco's Atlantic coast the [[Canary Islands]] belong to Spain, whereas [[Madeira]] to the north is [[Portugal|Portuguese]].
By the 7th century, the Arabs were in full expansion. It was in 670 C.E. that the first Arab invasions of the [[North Africa]]n coastal plain took place under [[Uqba ibn Nafi]], a general serving under the [[Umayyad]]s of [[Damascus]].  He swept with his army into what is now Morocco in the year 683. Which he called "Maghreb al Aqsa" or "The Far West".
 
  
What became modern Morocco in the 7th century, was the area invaded by the Arabs, who brought their customs, culture, and [[Islam]], to which most of the Berbers converted, forming states such as the [[Kingdom of Nekor]]. The country soon broke away from the control of the distant [[Abbasid]] caliphs in [[Baghdad]] under [[Idris ibn Abdallah]] who founded the [[Idrisid Dynasty]]. The Idrisids established Fez as their capital and Morocco became a centre of learning and a major regional power.  
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The coastal area rises to the Rif Mountains, which occupy the region in the north bordering the Mediterranean, running from the northwest to the northeast. Farther south, the [[Atlas Mountains]] run down the backbone of the country, from the southwest to the northeast. Most of the southeastern portion of the country lies in the [[Sahara Desert]] and thus is sparsely populated and unproductive economically. Most of the population lives in the north. The fertile coastal plains comprise the backbone for [[agriculture]]. [[Forest]]s cover about 12 percent of the land, while arable land accounts for 18 percent and 5 percent is irrigated.
  
Morocco would reach its height under a series of Berber origin dynasties that would replace the Arab Idrisids. First the [[Almoravid]]s, then the [[Almohad]]s would see Morocco rule most of Northwest Africa, as well as large sections of Islamic [[Iberian Peninsula|Iberia]], or [[Al-Andalus]]. Under Islamic rule, Spanish cities such as Sevilla and Granada were places where the citizenry prospered under a tolerant rule which also focused on scholarly advances in science, mathematics, astronomy, geography as well as medicine.
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Morocco's capital city is Rabat, and its largest city is the main port of [[Casablanca]]. Other cities include Agadir, Essaouira, Fes, Marrakech, Meknes, Mohammadia, Oujda, Ouarzazat, Safi, Salè, Tangier, Tiznit, and Tan-Tan.
  
However, Islamic rule in the [[Iberian Peninsula]] ended with the fall of [[Granada]] to the forces of King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella. Under the Catholic Inquisition, troops pillaged Granada amongst other Islamic cities and persecuted its citizens, Muslims and Jewish. Rather than face persecution and possible execution, many Muslims and Jews fled to Morocco. The Inquisitors, eager to abolish any trace of [[Islamic culture]], destroyed the libraries in Muslim Spain, where thousands of priceless texts were kept.
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===Climate===
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The climate is quite varied, from Mediterranean on the coast to extreme heat and cold in the interior regions, where it is mountainous or desert. Rainfall occurs from October to May, and summers are dry. Rainfall varies from 15 to 29 inches (38 to 74 cm) in the north but averages only 4 inches (10 cm) in the Sahara.
  
Smaller states of the region, such as the [[Berghouata]] and [[Banu Isam]], were conquered. The empire collapsed, however, with a long running series of [[civil war]]s.
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===Flora and fauna===
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Morocco is known for its [[wildlife]] [[biodiversity]], with [[bird]]s representing the most important fauna. Morocco has a total of 487 species, of which 32 are rare or accidental. [[Lizard]]s, chameleons, geckos, and [[snake]]s are common [[reptile]]s. [[Mammals]] are represented by wild [[boar]]s, [[fox]]es, the Barbary ape (a type of [[monkey]]), and small mammals that can survive in the desert.
  
===Morocco 1666-1912===
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The country has a variety of habitats: from snow-covered mountain peaks to scorching, arid deserts to fertile plains. The slopes of the mountains are covered with [[evergreen]] oak and cedar. East and south of the Atlas Mountains, scrubby steppe and desert vegetation is found, including date palms.
The [[Alaouite Dynasty]] eventually gained control. Morocco was facing aggression from [[Spain]] and the [[Ottoman Empire]] that was sweeping westward.  The Alaouites succeeded in stabilizing their position, and while the kingdom was smaller than previous ones in the region it remained quite wealthy.  In 1684, they annexed [[Tangier]].
 
  
Morocco was the first nation, in 1777, to recognize the fledgling [[United States]] as an independent nation.  In the beginning of the [[American Revolution]], American merchant ships were subject to attack by the [[Barbary Pirates]] while sailing the [[Atlantic ocean]].  At this time, American envoys tried to obtain protection from European powers, but to no avail. On December 20, 1777, Morocco's Sultan declared that the American merchant ships would be under the protection of the sultanate and could thus enjoy safe passage.
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==History==
 +
[[Archaeology|Archaeological]] evidence indicates the presence of ''[[Homo erectus]]'' in the area of modern Morocco about two hundred thousand years ago and of modern people since [[Neolithic]] times, a period when rainfall was more plentiful than the present. Two groups seem to have appeared in [[Northern Africa]] between roughly 15,000 and 10,000 B.C.E.., the Oranians and the Capsians. The [[Berber]]s are thought to have resulted from a fusion of these two peoples.  
  
The [[Moroccan-American Treaty of Friendship]] stands as the U.S.'s oldest non-broken friendship [[treaty]].  Signed by [[John Adams]] and [[Thomas Jefferson]], it has been in continuous effect since 1786. After the organization of the American government under the Constitution, President George Washington wrote a now venerated letter to the Sultan Sidi Mohamed strengthening the ties between the two countries. The United States legation (consulate) in Tangier is the first property the American government ever owned abroad.  The building now houses the [[Tangier American Legation Museum]].
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North Africa and Morocco were slowly drawn into the wider emerging Mediterranean world by [[Phoenicia]]n trading colonies and settlements, starting in the eighth century B.C.E. and lasting until the third century B.C.E. The arrival of Phoenicians heralded a long engagement with the wider Mediterranean, as this strategic region formed part of the [[Roman Empire]], known as ''Mauretania Tingitana.'' In the fifth century C.E., as the Roman Empire declined, the region fell to the [[Vandals]], [[Visigoths]], and then [[Byzantine Empire|Byzantine Greek]]s in rapid succession. During this time, however, the high mountains of most of modern Morocco remained unsubdued and stayed in the hands of their Berber inhabitants.
  
===European influence===
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===Early Islamic Morocco===
Successful [[Portugal|Portuguese]] efforts to control the [[Atlantic Ocean|Atlantic]] coast in the 15th century did not profoundly affect the Mediterranean heart of Morocco. After the [[Napoleonic Wars]], Egypt and the North African [[maghreb]] became increasingly ungovernable from [[Constantinople]], the resort of pirates under local [[bey]]s, and as Europe industrialized, an increasingly prized potential for colonization. The Maghreb had far greater proven wealth than the unknown rest of Africa and a location of strategic importance affecting the exit from the Mediterranean. For the first time, Morocco became a state of some interest in itself to the European Powers. [[France]] showed a strong interest in Morocco as early as 1830. Recognition by the [[United Kingdom]] in 1904 of France's [[sphere of influence]] in Morocco provoked a German reaction; the crisis of June 1905 was resolved at the [[Algeciras Conference]], [[Spain]] in 1906, which formalized France's "special position" and entrusted policing of Morocco to France and Spain jointly. A [[Agadir Crisis|second Moroccan crisis]] provoked by [[Berlin]], increased tensions between European powers. The [[Treaty of Fez]] (signed on [[March 30]], [[1912]]) made Morocco a [[protectorate]] of France. By the same treaty, [[Spain]] assumed the role of protecting power over the northern and southern [[Sahara]]n zones on [[November 27]] that year.
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[[Image:Koutobia Mosque, Morocco..jpg|thumb|400px|Koutoba Mosque, Marrakesh, Morocco.]]
 +
By the seventh century, the Arabs were in full expansion. In 670, the first Arab invasions of the North African coastal plain took place under Uqba ibn Nafi, a general serving under the [[Umayyad]]s of [[Damascus]]. He swept with his army into what is now Morocco in the year 683 and called the area "Maghreb al Aqsa" or "The Far West."
  
Many Moroccan soldiers ([[Goumiere]]s) who served in the [[French army]] assisted European and American troops in both [[World War I]] and [[World War II]].
+
The Arabs brought their customs, culture, and [[Islam]], to which most of the [[Berber]]s converted. The country soon broke away from the control of the distant [[Abbasid]] caliphs in [[Baghdad]] under [[Idris ibn Abdallah]], who founded the Idrisid Dynasty. The Idrisids established Fez as their capital, and Morocco became a center of learning and a major regional power.
  
===Resistance===
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===Influence in Spain===
Nationalist political parties, which subsequently arose under the French protectorate, based their arguments for Moroccan independence on such World War II declarations as the [[Atlantic Charter]] (a joint U.S.-British statement that set forth, among other things, the right of all people to choose the form of government under which they live). A manifesto of the [[Istiqlal Party]] (Independence party in English) in 1944 was one of the earliest public demands for independence. That party subsequently provided most of the leadership for the nationalist movement.
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Morocco reached its height under a series of Berber-origin dynasties that replaced the Arab Idrisids. In the eighth century under first the [[Almoravids]], then the [[Almohads]], the [[Moors]] of Morocco ruled most of northwestern Africa, as well as large sections of Islamic Iberia, called ''Al-Andalus'' or [[Andalusia.]] [[Cordoba]] became the capital, and was made into the most opulent city in Europe. Under 600 years of Islamic rule, Spanish cities such as [[Seville]] and [[Granada]] were places where the citizenry prospered under a tolerant rule that also focused on scholarly advances in [[science]], [[mathematics]], [[astronomy]], [[geography]], and [[medicine]].
  
France's [[exile]] of [[Sultan Mohammed V]] in 1953 to [[Madagascar]] and his replacement by the unpopular [[Mohammed Ben Aarafa]], whose reign was perceived as illegitimate, sparked active opposition to the French protectorate all over the country. The most notable occurred in [[Oujda]] where Moroccans attacked French and other European residents in the streets. Operations by the newly created "Armée de Libération", were launched on [[October 1]], [[1955]]. "L'Armée de Libération" was created by "Comité de Libération du Maghreb Arabe"  (Arab Maghreb Liberation Committee) in [[Cairo]], [[Egypt]] to constitute a resistance movement against occupation like the [[National Liberation Front (Algeria)|National Liberation Front]] in [[Algeria]]. Its goal was the return of King Mohammed V and the liberation of [[Algeria]] and [[Tunisia]] as well. France allowed Mohammed V to return in 1955, and the negotiations that led to Moroccan independence began the following year.
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Islamic rule in the [[Iberian Peninsula]] ended in the fifteenth century with the fall of [[Granada]] under [[Muhammad XII]], who held out fighting for 12 years, to the Spanish Royal Army of [[King Ferdinand]] and [[Queen Isabella]]. Under the Catholic [[Inquisition]], Spanish troops pillaged Granada among other Islamic cities. Rather than face possible execution, many Muslims and [[Jew]]s fled to Morocco. The Inquisitors, eager to abolish any trace of Islamic culture, destroyed the libraries in Muslim Spain, where thousands of priceless texts were kept.
  
All those events helped increase the degree of [[solidarity]] between the people and the newly returned king. For this reason, the revolution that Morocco knew was called "la révolution du Roi et du Peuple" (The revolution of the King and the People) and it is celebrated every [[August 20]].
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Smaller states of the region, such as the Berghouata and Banu Isam, were conquered. The empire collapsed, however, with a long-running series of [[civil war]]s.
  
===Independence===
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The Alaouite Dynasty eventually gained control. Morocco was facing aggression from [[Spain]] and the [[Ottoman Empire]], which was sweeping westward. The Alaouites succeeded in stabilizing their position, and while the kingdom was smaller than previous ones in the region it remained quite wealthy. In 1684, it annexed [[Tangier]].
Morocco recovered its political [[independence]] from France on [[March 2]], [[1956]] and on [[April 7]] of that year France officially relinquished its protectorate in Morocco. Through agreements with Spain in 1956 and 1958, Moroccan control over certain Spanish-ruled areas was restored, though attempts to claim other Spanish colonial possessions through [[Ifni War|military action]] were less successful. The internationalized city of [[Tangier]] was reintegrated with the signing of the [[Tangier Protocol]] on [[October 29]], [[1956]] ''(see [[Tangier Crisis]])''. [[Hassan II of Morocco|Hassan II]] became King of Morocco on [[March 3]], [[1961]]. His rule would be marked by political unrest, and the ruthless government response led by the [[Makhzen]] earned the name [[years of lead|"the years of lead"]]. The Spanish [[enclave]] of [[Ifni]] in the south became part of the new Morocco in 1969. Morocco annexed [[Western Sahara]] during the 1970s, but final resolution on the status of the territory remains unresolved.  (See [[History of Western Sahara]].)
 
  
Tentative political reform in the 1990s resulted in the establishment of a bicameral legislature in 1997. Morocco was granted [[Major non-NATO ally]] status in June 2004 and signed [[free trade agreement]]s with the United States and the European Union.
+
===Barbary Coast===
 +
The Muslim coast of North Africa, including Morocco, was called the [[Barbary Coast]], named for the [[Berber]] tribes in the area. From the 1500s, piracy abounded, with Europeans as the main target. By the beginning of the [[American Revolution]], American merchant ships were subject to attack by [[Barbary pirates]] in the [[Atlantic Ocean]], a serious threat to the survival of the fledgling republic. In 1777, Morocco's sultan declared that American merchant ships would be under his protection and enjoy safe passage. The [[United States]] legation (consulate) in Tangier is the first property the American government ever owned abroad. It now houses a museum. But this attempt to deal with pirates by paying them off, as the Europeans had chosen to do for decades, was successfully increasing the problem. But by 1801, the [[First Barbary War]] was in progress, an attempt to make the seas a safe place to travel. The [[Second Barbary War]], 1819, was necessary before the problem was solved.
  
In 2003, Morocco's largest city, [[Casablanca]] suffered from [[Casablanca Attacks|terrorist attacks]]. The attacks were targeted against Western and Jewish places and left 33 civilians dead and more than 100 people injured, mostly Moroccans.
+
===European influence===
 +
Successful [[Portugal|Portuguese]] efforts to control the [[Atlantic Ocean|Atlantic]] coast in the fifteenth century did not profoundly affect the Mediterranean heart of Morocco. After the [[Napoleonic Wars]], [[Egypt]] and the [[Maghreb]] became increasingly ungovernable from [[Constantinople]], the resort of pirates under local beys, and, as Europe industrialized, an increasingly prized site for colonization. The Maghreb had far greater proven wealth than the unknown rest of [[Africa]] and a location of strategic importance affecting the exit from the [[Mediterranean Sea]].
  
In 2006, Morocco celebrated its 50th anniversary of [[independence]].
+
For the first time, Morocco became a state of some interest to the European powers. [[France]] exhibited this as early as 1830. Recognition in 1904 by the [[United Kingdom]] of France's sphere of influence in Morocco provoked a German reaction; the crisis of June 1905 was resolved at the Algeciras Conference in 1906, which formalized France's "special position" and entrusted policing of Morocco to France and [[Spain]] jointly. A second Moroccan crisis provoked by [[Berlin]] increased tensions between European powers. The Treaty of Fez (signed in 1912) made Morocco a protectorate of France. By the same treaty, Spain assumed the role of protecting power over the northern and southern [[Sahara]]n zones.
  
==Politics==
+
Many Moroccan soldiers who served in the French army assisted European and American troops in both [[World War I]] and [[World War II]].
<!--Please add new information into relevant articles of the series—>
 
{{morepolitics|country=Morocco}}
 
Morocco is a ''[[de jure]]'' constitutional [[monarchy]], with an elected [[parliament]]. The [[King of Morocco]], with vast executive powers, can dissolve government and deploy the [[military of Morocco|military]], among other responsibilities.  Opposition political parties are legal and several have arisen in recent years.
 
  
===Human rights===
+
===Resistance===
{{Main|Human rights in Morocco}}
+
Nationalist political parties, which subsequently arose under the French protectorate, based their arguments for Moroccan independence on such World War II declarations as the [[Atlantic Charter]] (that set forth, among other things, the right of all people to choose the form of government under which they live). A manifesto of the Istiqlal Party (Independence Party) in 1944 was one of the earliest public demands for independence. That party subsequently provided most of the leadership for the nationalist movement.
Morocco's history after independence and under the reign of [[Hassan II]] was marked by the period of the so-called ''[[Years of Lead]]''. Politically motivated persecutions and executions by the [[Makhzen]] were common.  
 
  
However, under the reign of [[Mohammed VI]], and with the launch of [[Equity and Reconciliation Commission (Morocco)|Equity and Reconciliation Commission]] (IER) to investigate into the attrocities, Morocco is trying to reconciliate with the victims. Many new laws and codes concerning all aspects of life are being launched. The most notable event was the creation of the ''[[Mudawana]]''- a family code which was the first unique initiative of its kind in the Arab and Muslim world. The code gives women more rights. Other issues such as the abolition of [[capital punishment]] are being debated and by spring 2007, the [[Parliament of Morocco|Moroccan parliament]] will vote on the issue.
+
France's exile of Sultan Mohammed V in 1953 to [[Madagascar]] and his replacement by the unpopular Mohammed Ben Aarafa, whose reign was perceived as illegitimate, sparked active opposition to the French protectorate all over the country. The most notable occurred in Oujda, where Moroccans attacked French and other European residents in the streets. Operations by the newly created "Army of Liberation" were launched in 1955. The "Army of Liberation" was created by the Arab Maghreb Liberation Committee in [[Cairo]], [[Egypt]], to constitute a resistance movement against occupation, like the National Liberation Front in [[Algeria]]. Its goal was the return of King Mohammed V and the liberation of Algeria and [[Tunisia]] as well. France allowed Mohammed V to return in 1955, and the negotiations that led to Moroccan independence began the following year.
  
Despite improvements under Mohammed VI, international organisations continue raising criticism against the human rights situation in Morocco in general (i.e. arrests of suspected Islamist extremists during 2004 and 2005 related to [[2003 Casablanca bombings]]), and in Western Sahara in particular. <ref>[http://www.hrw.org/english/docs/2006/01/18/morocc12228.htm Human rights overview on Morocco - HRW]</ref>
+
Those events helped increase the sense of solidarity between the people and the newly returned king. For this reason, the revolution in Morocco was called the Revolution of the King and the People and is celebrated every August 20.
  
==Administrative divisions==
+
===Independence===
{{main|Regions of Morocco}}
+
Morocco recovered its political independence from France on March 2, 1956 and on April 7 of that year France officially relinquished its protectorate in Morocco. Through agreements with Spain in 1956 and 1958, Moroccan control over certain Spanish-ruled areas was restored, though attempts to claim other Spanish colonial possessions through military action were less successful. The internationalized city of [[Tangier]] was reintegrated with the signing of the Tangier Protocol on October 29, 1956.  
[[Image:3 maps morocco.PNG|thumb|300px|Different maps used to illustrate the area of Morocco]]
 
Morocco is divided into 16 regions <ref>[http://www.statoids.com/uma.html Regions of Morocco - statoids.com]</ref>. As part of a 1997 decentralization/regionalization law passed by the legislature, 16 new regions were created. These 16 regions are:
 
  
[[Image:Western sahara walls moroccan.gif|thumb|200px|A detailed map showing the areas administered by Morocco in Western Sahara]]
+
Hassan II became king of Morocco on March 3, 1961. His rule would be marked by political unrest.
{|
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Tentative political reform in the 1990s resulted in the establishment of a bicameral legislature directly elected by the people in 1997. King Hassan died in 1999 and was succeeded by his son, Mohamed VI, who pledged to continue steps toward liberalization. The government has undertaken a number of economic, political, and social reforms, including creation in 2006 of the Equity and Reconciliation Commission, which investigated allegations of human rights abuse from 1956 to 1999.
|-
 
|
 
*[[Chaouia-Ouardigha]]
 
*[[Doukkala-Abda]]
 
*[[Fès-Boulemane]]
 
*[[Gharb-Chrarda-Béni Hssen]]
 
*[[Grand Casablanca]]
 
*[[Guelmim-Es Semara]]
 
*[[Laâyoune-Boujdour-Sakia El Hamra]]
 
*[[Marrakech-Tensift-El Haouz]]
 
|
 
*[[Meknès-Tafilalet]]
 
*[[Oriental Region|Oriental]]
 
*[[Oued Ed-Dahab-Lagouira]]
 
*[[Rabat-Salé-Zemmour-Zaer]]
 
*[[Souss-Massa-Draâ]]
 
*[[Tadla-Azilal]]
 
*[[Tangier-Tétouan]]
 
*[[Taza-Al Hoceima-Taounate]]
 
|}
 
  
===Western Sahara status===
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The 2002 legislative elections were based on party lists, but 10 percent of the seats were set aside for females. Reform of the Family Code, or ''Mudawana'', was pushed through the legislature by the king in 2004. The new code asserts the equality of men and women, raises the age of consent to [[marriage]] for girls to eighteen, and makes [[polygamy]] impossible to practice.
Due to the conflict over [[Western Sahara]], the status of both regions of "Laâyoune-Boujdour-Sakia El Hamra" and "Oued Ed-Dahab-Lagouira" is disputed.
 
  
Morocco suggests, through the [[CORCAS]], a [[Self-governance|self-governing]] and [[autonomy]] status to the whole territory of Western Sahara.
+
In 2003, Morocco's largest city, [[Casablanca]], suffered from [[terrorism|terrorist]] attacks targeted against Western and Jewish places. In 2006, Morocco celebrated its fiftieth anniversary of independence.
  
==Geography==
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==Politics==
[[Image:Waterfall (Cascade d'Ouzoud).jpg|thumb|left|[[Ouzoud Falls]]]]
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[[Image:3 maps morocco.PNG|thumb|400px|Different maps used to illustrate the area of Morocco, with and without Western Sahara.]]
[[Image:Sahara dust plume Nov 1998.jpg|thumb|275px|Map showing the [[climate]] in and around Morocco [http://visibleearth.nasa.gov/view_rec.php?id=1298] ]]{{main|Geography of Morocco}}''See also [[List of cities in Morocco and Western Sahara]]''
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Morocco is a de jure constitutional monarchy, with an elected parliament. The king, with vast executive powers, can dissolve government and deploy the military, among other responsibilities. Opposition political parties are legal and several have arisen in recent years.
At 172,402 sq.mi (446,550 sq.km), Morocco is the 57th-largest country in the world (after [[Uzbekistan]]). It is comparable in size to [[Iraq]], and is somewhat larger than the US state of [[California]].  
 
  
[[Algeria]] borders Morocco to the east and southeast though the border between the two countries has been closed since 1994. There are also four [[Spain|Spanish]] enclaves on the Mediterranean coast: [[Ceuta]], [[Melilla]], [[Peñón de Vélez de la Gomera]], [[Peñón de Alhucemas]], and the [[Islas Chafarinas|Chafarinas]] islands,as well as the disputed islet [[Isla Perejil|Perejil]]. Off the Atlantic coast the [[Canary Islands]] belong to [[Spain]], whereas [[Madeira]] to the north is [[Portugal|Portuguese]].  To the north, Morocco is bordered by and controls part of the [[Strait of Gibraltar]], giving it power over the waterways in and out of the [[Mediterranean]] sea.  The [[Rif|Rif mountains]] occupy the region bordering the Mediterranean from the north-west to the north-east. The [[Atlas Mountains]] run down the backbone of the country, from the south west to the north east. Most of the south east portion of the country is in the [[Sahara Desert]] and as such is generally sparsely populated and unproductive economically. Most of the population lives to the north of these mountains, while to the south is the desert. To the south, lies the [[Western Sahara]], a former Spanish colony that was annexed by Morocco in 1975 (see [[Green March]]). Morocco claims that the Western Sahara is part of its territory and refers to that as its [[Southern Provinces]].
+
Politics takes place in a framework of a parliamentary [[constitutional monarchy]], in which the prime minister is the head of government, and of a pluriform, multi-party system. Executive power is exercised by the government. Legislative power is vested in both the government and the two chambers of parliament, the Assembly of Representatives of Morocco and the Assembly of Councillors. The Moroccan constitution provides for a monarchy with a Parliament and an independent judiciary.
  
Morocco's capital city is [[Rabat]], and its largest city is the main port of [[Casablanca]].
+
The constitution grants the king extensive powers; he is both the political leader and the "Defender of the Faith." He presides over the Council of Ministers; appoints the prime minister following legislative elections, and on recommendations from the latter, appoints the members of the government. While the constitution theoretically allows the king to terminate the tenure of any minister and, after consultation with the heads of the higher and lower Assemblies, to dissolve the Parliament, suspend the constitution, call for new elections, or rule by decree, the only time this happened was in 1965. The king is formally the chief of the military. Upon the death of his father Mohammed V, King Hassan II succeeded to the throne in 1961. He ruled Morocco for the next 38 years, until he died in 1999. His son, King Mohamed VI, assumed the throne in July 1999.
  
Other cities include
+
In 2011, following widespread protests, a new constitution was approved and took effect on July 29, 2011. Key reforms include: the king is no longer "sacred" although still "inviolable" (cannot be critized); the king will select a prime minister from the party that wins the most seats in parliament; the prime minister is the head of government (not the king) with the power to dissolve the lower house of parliament; the Berber language is an official state language along with Arabic; and women are guaranteed "civic and social" equality with men (previously, they had only "political" equality).<ref> [https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-13964550 Q&A: Morocco's referendum on reform] ''BBC News'', June 29, 2011. Retrieved February 15, 2022.</ref>
[[Agadir]],
 
[[Essaouira]],
 
[[Fes]],
 
[[Marrakech]],
 
[[Meknes]],
 
[[Mohammadia]],
 
[[Oujda]],
 
[[Ouarzazat]],
 
[[Safi, Morocco|Safi]],
 
[[Salè]],
 
[[Tangier]],
 
[[Tiznit]],
 
[[Tan-Tan]].
 
  
===Climate===
+
===Human rights===
 +
[[Image:Rabat city walls.jpg|thumb|300px|City walls in Rabat]]
 +
Morocco's history after independence, under the reign of [[Hassan II]], was marked by a period of politically motivated persecutions and executions.
  
The [[Mediterranean climate|climate is Mediterranean]], which becomes more extreme towards the interior regions where it is mountainous. The terrain is such that the coastal [[plain]]s are rich and accordingly, they comprise the backbone for [[agriculture]]. [[Forest]]s cover about 12% of the land while arable land accounts for 18%. 5% is irrigated.
+
However, under the reign of Mohammed VI, and with the launch of the Equity and Reconciliation Commission (IER) to investigate the atrocities, Morocco is trying to reconcile with the victims. Many new laws and codes concerning all aspects of life are being launched. The most notable event was the creation of the ''Mudawana''—a family code that was the first unique initiative of its kind in the Arab and Muslim world. The code gives women more rights. Other issues, such as the abolition of [[capital punishment]], are being considered.
  
==Economy==
+
Despite improvements under Mohammed VI, international organizations have continued to criticize the human rights situation in Morocco in general (arrests of suspected [[Islamist extremists]] during 2004 and 2005 related to the 2003 [[Casablanca]] bombings), and in Western Sahara in particular.
  
{{main|Economy of Morocco}}
+
===Media===
[[Image:Bank in marocco.jpg|thumb|The [[Central bank]] of Morocco (Bank Al Maghrib)]]
+
The government of Morocco owns many key media outlets, including radio and television. Moroccans have access to approximately 2,000 domestic and foreign publications. The Moroccan press agency, Maghreb Arab Press, and one Arabic daily newspaper, ''Al-Anbaa,'' are official organs of the government. One additional Arabic daily newspaper, ''Assahra Al Maghribia,'' and one French-language daily newspaper, ''Le Matin,'' are semi-official organs of the government. Morocco has 27 AM radio stations, 25 FM radio stations, six shortwave stations, and five television stations.
Morocco has signed Free Trade Agreements with the [[European Union]] (to take effect 2010) and the [[United States of America]]. The United States Senate approved by a vote of 85 to 13, on July 22, 2004, the [[US-Morocco Free Trade Agreement]], which will allow for 98% of the two-way trade of consumer and industrial products to be without tariffs.  The agreement entered into force in January 2006.
 
  
Morocco's largest industry is the mining of [[phosphates]]. Its second largest source of income is from nationals living abroad who [[value transfer system|transfer money]] to relatives living in Morocco. The country's third largest source of revenue is [[tourism]].
+
Although journalists continue to practice self-censorship, opposition dailies have begun to explore social and political issues that have traditionally been considered out of bounds, but the media continue to exercise great caution when discussing government corruption, [[human rights]], and Morocco’s policy toward [[Western Sahara]].
  
Morocco ranks among the world’s largest producers and exporters of [[cannabis]], and its cultivation and sale provide the economic base for much of the population of northern Morocco. The cannabis is typically processed into [[hashish]]. This activity represents 0.57 per cent of Morocco's Gross Domestic Product (GDP), estimated at US$ 37.3 billion. A UN survey<ref>[http://www.unis.unvienna.org/unis/pressrels/2003/unisnar826.html Europe's Drug Consumption Stimulates Cannabis Cultivation in Morocco] UN Information Service</ref> estimated cannabis cultivation at about 1,340 square kilometres (515&nbsp;[[square mile|sq&nbsp;mi]]) in Morocco's five northern provinces. This represents 10 % of the total area and 27 per cent of the arable lands of the surveyed territory and 1.5 per cent of Morocco's total arable land. Morocco is a party to the 1988 UN Drug Convention and in 1992 Morocco passed legislation designed to implement the Convention.
+
The Committee to Protect Journalists in 2007 designated Morocco as one of the world's worst backsliders on [[freedom of the press|press freedom]], noting that independent journalists have been the targets of a series of politicized court cases, financial pressures, and harassment from authorities. In July 2007, the publisher of an independent weekly and one of his reporters were charged with possessing classified documents after they published a secret government document regarding terrorist threats against Morocco.
  
Morocco has an [[unemployment]] rate of 12.1% (2004 Data) and a 1999 estimate by the CIA puts 19% of the Moroccan population under the [[poverty line]]<ref>[http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/mo.html CIA World Factbook]</ref>.
+
===Foreign relations===
 +
Morocco is a moderate [[Arab]] state that maintains close relations with [[Europe]] and the [[United States]] and is active in Maghreb, Arab, and African affairs. It belongs to the Arab League, Arab Maghreb Union, Organization of the Islamic Conference, and the Non-Aligned Movement. Although not a member of the African Union, Morocco contributes to [[U.N.]] peacekeeping efforts on the continent.
  
Though working towards change, Morocco historically has utilized child labor on a large scale. In 1999, the Moroccan Government stated that over 500,000 children under the age of 15 were in the labor force<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/369753.stm Child labour rife in Morocco] BBC Online</ref>.
+
Morocco supports the search for peace and moderation in the [[Middle East]]. In 1986, then-King Hassan II took the daring step of inviting then-Israeli Prime Minister [[Shimon Peres]] for talks, becoming only the second Arab leader to host an Israeli leader. Following the September 1993 signing of the Israeli-Palestinian Declaration of Principles, Morocco accelerated its economic ties and political contacts with [[Israel]]. In September 1994, Morocco and Israel announced the opening of bilateral liaison offices. These offices were closed in 2000 following sustained Israeli-Palestinian violence, but Moroccan-Israeli diplomatic contacts continue.
  
==Demographics==
+
Morocco was the first Arab state to condemn [[Iraq]]’s invasion of [[Kuwait]] in 1990 and sent troops to help defend [[Saudi Arabia]]. It maintains close relations with Saudi Arabia and the [[Persian Gulf]] states, which have provided Morocco with substantial amounts of financial assistance. Morocco has also supported efforts to stabilize Iraq following the downfall of [[Saddam Hussein]].
  
{{main|Demographics of Morocco}}
+
As far as relations with the United States, Morocco was the first country to seek diplomatic relations with the young country in 1777 and remains one of its closest allies in the region. As a stable, democratizing, and liberalizing Arab Muslim nation, Morocco is important for U.S. interests in the Middle East.
[[Image:Morocco ethno 1973.jpg|right|thumb|350px|Ethnolinguistic Groups in Morocco]]
 
Morocco is the fourth most populous Arab country, after [[Egypt]], [[Sudan]] and [[Algeria]]. Most Moroccans are [[Sunni]] Muslims of Arab, Berber, or mixed Arab-Berber stock. The Arabs invaded Morocco in the 7th century and established their culture there. [[History of the Jews in Morocco|Morocco's Jewish minority]] has decreased significantly and numbers about 7,000 (See [[Jewish exodus from Arab lands]]). Most of the 100,000 foreign residents are French or Spanish; many are teachers or technicians and more and more retirees, especially in [[Marrakech]].
 
  
There is no significant [[genetics|genetic]] difference between Moroccan Arabs and Moroccan non-Arabs (i.e., Berbers and Saharawis). Thus, it is likely that [[Arabization]] was mainly a cultural process without genetic replacement.<ref>[http://www.upf.edu/cexs/recerca/bioevo/2000BioEvo/BE2000-Bosch-STRs-EJHG.pdf Genetic structure of north-west Africa revealed by STR analysis]</ref>. However, and according to the [[European Journal of Human Genetics]], North-Western [[Africa]]ns were genetically closer to [[Iberian]]s and to other [[Europe]]ans than to
+
Morocco was among the first Arab and Islamic states to denounce the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks in the United States and declare solidarity with the American people in the war against terror. Morocco has seen its own [[terrorism]] at home as well. On May 16, 2003, Moroccan suicide bombers simultaneously attacked five sites in Casablanca, killing more than forty people and wounding over a hundred. More than a million people subsequently demonstrated to condemn the attacks.
[[Sub-Saharan Africa|Sub-Saharan Africans]]. <ref>European Journal of Human Genetics (2000) 8, 360–366</ref>.
 
  
Morocco's official language is [[classical Arabic]]. The country's distinctive Arabic dialect is called [[Moroccan Arabic]]. Approximately 12 million (40% of the population), mostly in [[rural area]]s, speak [[Berber language|Berber]]—which exists in Morocco in three different dialects ([[Tarifit]], [[Tashelhiyt]], and [[Tamazight]])— either as a first language or bilingually with the spoken Arabic dialect. <ref>[http://uk.encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761552010/Berber_(people).html Berber (people)] Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2006</ref> [[French language|French]], which remains Morocco's unofficial second language, is taught universally and still serves as Morocco's primary language of commerce and economics. It also is widely used in education and government. About 20,000 Moroccans in the northern part of the country speak [[Spanish language|Spanish]] as a second language in parallel with [[Tarifit]]. [[English language|English]], while still far behind French and Spanish in terms of number of speakers, is rapidly becoming the foreign language of choice among educated youth. As a result of national education reforms entering into force in late 2002, English will be taught in all public schools from the fourth year on.
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====Western Sahara====
 +
[[File:Western sahara walls moroccan.png|thumb|400px|A detailed map showing the areas administered by Morocco in Western Sahara]]
  
Most people live west of the [[Atlas Mountains]], a range that insulates the country from the [[Sahara Desert]]. [[Casablanca]] is the center of commerce and industry and the leading port; [[Rabat]] is the seat of government; [[Tangier]] is the gateway to Morocco from [[Spain]] and also a major port; [[Fez, Morocco|Fez]] is the cultural and religious center; and the dominantly "Berber" [[Marrakech]] is a major tourist center.
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The major issue in Morocco's foreign relations is its claim to [[Western Sahara]], a former Spanish territory to the south. As a result of Algeria's continued support for the Polisario Front in the dispute over Western Sahara, relations between Morocco and [[Algeria]] have remained strained over the past several decades, although they have full diplomatic relations and there is periodic high-level contact between the two countries.
  
[[Education]] in Morocco is free and compulsory through primary school (age 15). Nevertheless, many children —particularly girls in rural areas— still do not attend school. The country's [[illiteracy]] rate has been stuck at around 50% for some years, but reaches as high as 90% among girls in rural regions. On September 2006, UNESCO awarded Morocco amongst other countries; [[Cuba]], [[Pakistan]], [[Rajastan]] ([[India]]) and [[Turkey]] the "UNESCO 2006 Literacy Prize" <ref> {{cite web | url=http://portal.unesco.org/en/ev.php-URL_ID=33384&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html | title=2006 UNESCO Literacy Prize winners announced | publisher= UNESCO.org | accessdate=2006-09-27 }}</ref>.
+
Morocco's claim to sovereignty over the Western Sahara is based largely on a historical argument of traditional loyalty of the Sahrawi tribal leaders to the Moroccan sultan as spiritual leader and ruler. The Polisario claims to represent the aspirations of the Western Saharan inhabitants for independence. Algeria claims none of the territory for itself but maintains that Sahrawis should determine the territory's future status. Morocco has sent in settlers to reinforce its claim and built a fortified berm around three-fourths of Western Sahara. It has de facto administrative control over 80 percent of the territory.
  
Morocco has about 230,000 students enrolled in 14 public universities. In some ways, the most prestigious is "Mohammed V University" in Rabat -along with [[Al Akhawayn University]] in [[Ifrane]] (a private university)-, with faculties of law, sciences, and liberal arts. Al-Akhawayn, founded in 1993 by King Hassan II and King Fahd of Saudi Arabia, is an English-medium, American-style university comprising about 1,000 students. [[University of Al Karaouine]], in Fez, is the oldest university in the world and has been a center for knowledge for more than 1,000 years.
+
The [[United Nations]] continues to explore ways of arriving at a mutually agreed political settlement and to promote confidence-building measures between the parties in the interim. Talks in August 2007 ended with the parties agreeing that the status quo is unacceptable and negotiations will continue.
  
==Culture==
+
===Administrative divisions===
 +
Morocco is divided into sixteen regions. As part of a 1997 decentralization/regionalization law passed by the legislature, sixteen new regions were created. Due to the conflict over [[Western Sahara]], the status of both regions of Laâyoune-Boujdour-Sakia El Hamra and Oued Ed-Dahab-Lagouira is disputed.
  
{{main|Culture of Morocco}}
+
==Economy==
[[Image:King Hassan II Mosque 02.jpg|thumb|150px|King [[Hassan II Mosque]]]]
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[[Image:Bank in marocco.jpg|thumb|400px|The central bank of Morocco (Bank Al Maghrib)]]
Morocco is an ethnically diverse country with a rich [[culture]] and [[civilization]]. Through [[History of Morocco|Moroccan history]], Morocco hosted many people coming from both East ([[Phoenicians]], [[Carthaginians]], Jews and Arabs), South ([[Africans]]) and North ([[Ancient Rome|Romans]], [[Vandals]], [[Moors]] and Jews). All those civilizations have had an impact on the social structure of Morocco. It conceived various forms of beliefs, from [[paganism]], [[Judaism]], [[Christianity]] to [[Islam]].
+
Morocco has the largest reserves of [[phosphate]]s in the world and mining and processing it (into [[fertilizer]]s and [[phosphoric acid]]) are its largest industry. Its second largest source of income is from nationals living abroad who transfer money to relatives living in Morocco. The country's third largest source of revenue is [[tourism]].
  
Each region possesses its own specificities, contributing, thus, to the making of national culture and to the [[civilization]] legacy. Morocco has set among its top priorities the protection of its legacy and the preservation of its cultural identity.
+
Moroccan economic policies brought macroeconomic stability to the country in the early 1990s but have not spurred growth sufficient to reduce unemployment, which overall is 7.7 percent (2006 est.) but nears 20 percent in urban areas. Poverty has increased due to Morocco's continued dependence on foreign energy and its inability to promote the growth of small and medium size enterprises. However, GDP growth rebounded to 6.7 percent in 2006 due to high rainfall, which resulted in a strong second harvest. [[Petroleum]] has been discovered in the southeast, and the government revised its investment code to encourage exploration and development of oil reserves, which would reduce the nation's dependence on costly imports.
  
Ethnically and culturally speaking, Morocco nowadays can be considered the least Arabic among [[Arab]] countries. Most of its population is of [[Berber]] origins.
+
Moroccan authorities understand that reducing [[poverty]] and providing jobs are key to domestic security and development. In 2004, they instituted measures to boost foreign direct investment and trade by signing a [[free trade]] agreement with the United States that became effective in January 2006. The agreement allows 98 percent of the two-way trade of consumer and industrial products to be tariff free. A similar agreement with the [[European Union]] is scheduled to take effect in 2010, and a free trade agreement has also been signed with [[Egypt]], [[Tunisia]], and [[Jordan]]. Morocco also established new commercial ties with [[China]] and sold government shares in the state telecommunications company and the largest state-owned bank.
  
===Cuisine===
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Long-term challenges include preparing the economy for freer trade with the United States and European Union, improving [[education]] and job prospects for Morocco's youth, and raising living standards, which the government hopes to achieve by increasing tourism and boosting competitiveness in [[textiles]].
  
{{Main|Cuisine of Morocco}}
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The main industries, in addition to tourism and phosphate rock [[mining]] and processing, are food processing, [[leather]] goods, textiles, and construction. Industry comprises about a third of GDP, with [[agriculture]] contributing 13 percent and services 55 percent. GDP per capita is $4,600 (2006 est.). A fifth of the population lives below the poverty line, but the percentage is higher in rural areas than in the cities.
Moroccan cuisine has long been considered as one of the most diversified cuisines in the world. The reason is because of the interaction of Morocco with the outside world for centuries.  The cuisine of Morocco is a mix of Berber, Spanish, Moorish, Middle Eastern, Mediterranean, and African cuisines. The cuisine of Morocco has been influenced by the native [[Berber cuisine]], the Arabic Andalusian cuisine; brought by the [[Moriscos]] when they left Spain, the [[Turkish cuisine]] from the Turkish and the [[Middle Eastern cuisine]]s brought by the Arabs as well as the [[Jewish cuisine]].
 
  
[[Spices]] are used extensively in Moroccan food. While spices have been imported to Morocco for thousands of years, many ingredients, like [[saffron]] from Tiliouine, [[mint]] and [[olive]]s from Meknes, and [[orange (fruit)|orange]]s and [[lemon]]s from Fez, are home-grown. [[Chicken]] is the most widely eaten meat in Morocco. The most commonly eaten red meat in Morocco is [[beef]] although [[lamb]] is preferred while being relatively expensive. [[Couscous]] is the most famous Moroccan dish along with [[pastilla]], [[tajine]], and [[harira]]. The most popular drink is [[green tea]] with mint. The tea is accompanied with hard sugar cones or lumps.
+
Morocco is a major grower of [[wheat]], [[barley]], [[beans]], [[sugar beet]]s, and citrus [[fruit]]s, but productivity is erratic due to frequent [[drought]]s. One of the government's priorities is increasing the amount of [[irrigation|irrigated]] farmland.
  
===Literature===
+
Morocco ranks among the world’s largest producers and exporters of [[cannabis]], and its cultivation and sale provide the economic base for much of the population of the Rif Mountains in northern Morocco, a region that is isolated, underdeveloped, and impoverished. The cannabis is typically processed into [[hashish]], most of which is exported to [[Algeria]] or Tunisia and smuggled to [[Spain]], [[Portugal]], and [[France]].
  
{{Main|Literature of Morocco}}
+
==Demographics==
Moroccan literature is written in Arabic, Berber or French, and particularly by people of Morocco. It also contains literature produced in [[Al-Andalus]]. Under the [[Almohad]] dynasty Morocco experienced a period of prosperity and brilliance of learning. The Almohad built the Marrakech Kutubiya Mosque, which accommodated no less than 25,000 people, but was also famed for its books, manuscripts, libraries and book shops, which gave it its name; the first book bazaar in history. The Almohad Caliph Abu Yakub had a great love for collecting books. He founded a great library, which was eventually carried to the Casbah and turned into a public library. Modern Moroccan literature began in the 1930s. Two main factors gave Morocco a pulse toward witnessing the birth of a modern literature. Morocco, as a French and Spanish protectorate left Moroccan intellectuals the opportunity to exchange and to produce literary works freely enjoying the contact of other [[Arabic literature]] and Europe.
+
[[Image:Morocco ethno 1973.jpg|right|thumb|400px|Ethnolinguistic Groups in Morocco]]
During the 1950s and 1960s, Morocco was a refuge and artistic centre and attracted writers as Paul Bowles, Tennessee Williams and William S. Burroughs. Moroccan literature flourished with novelists such as Mohamed Choukri, who wrote in Arabic, and Driss Chraïbi who wrote in French. Other important Moroccan authors include Tahar ben Jelloun, Fouad Laroui, Mohammed berrada and Leila Abouzeid.
+
[[Image:Tangier, Morocco.jpg|thumb|400px|Tangier, Morocco, ]]
 +
Modern genetic analyses have confirmed that various populations have contributed to the present-day population of Morocco, including, in addition to the main ethnic groups—[[Berber]]s and [[Arab]]s—[[Phoenicia]]ns, [[Sephardic]] [[Jew]]s, and sub-Saharan [[Africa]]ns.  
  
===Music===
+
The Arabs invaded Morocco in the seventh century and established their culture. Today Morocco is the fourth most populous Arab country, after [[Egypt]], [[Sudan]], and [[Algeria]]. Most Moroccans are Sunni [[Muslim]]s of Arab, [[Berber]], or mixed Arab-Berber stock. The [[Jew]]ish minority has decreased significantly and now numbers about five thousand. Most of the foreign residents are French or Spanish; many are teachers, technicians, or retirees, especially in Marrakesh.
  
{{Main|Music of Morocco}}
+
Most people live west of the [[Atlas Mountains]], a range that insulates the country from the [[Sahara Desert]]. Casablanca is the center of commerce and industry and the leading port; Rabat is the seat of government; [[Tangier]] is the gateway to Morocco from [[Spain]] and also a major port; Fez is the cultural and religious center; and the dominantly Berber [[Marrakesh]] is a major tourist center.
Moroccan music is predominantly Arab, but [[Andalusian]] and other imported influences have had a major effect on the country's musical character. Rock-influenced [[chaabi]] bands are widespread, as is [[trance music]] with historical origins in [[Muslim music]].
 
  
Morocco is home to [[Andalusian classical music]] that is found throughout North Africa. It probably evolved under the Moors in [[Córdoba, Spain|Cordoba]], and the Persian-born musician [[Ziryab]] is usually credited with its invention.
+
===Language===
 +
Morocco's official language is classical Arabic but most of its people speak a distinctive dialect called Moroccan Arabic. Approximately 40 percent of the population, mostly in rural areas, speak one of three different dialects of Berber either as a first language or bilingually with the spoken Arabic dialect. French, which remains Morocco's unofficial second language, is taught universally and still serves as Morocco's primary language of commerce and economics. It also is widely used in education and government.
  
There are three varieties of Berber folk music: village and ritual music, and the music performed by professional musicians.
+
About twenty thousand Moroccans in the north speak Spanish as a second language. English, while still far behind French and Spanish in terms of number of speakers, is rapidly becoming the foreign language of choice among educated youth. As a result of reforms implemented in 2002, English will be taught in all public schools.
  
Chaabi (''popular'') is a music consisting of numerous varieties which are descended from the multifarious forms of Moroccan folk music. Chaabi was originally performed in markets, but is now found at any celebration or meeting.
+
===Education===
 +
[[Education]] in Morocco is free and compulsory through primary school. Nevertheless, many children—particularly girls in rural areas—do not attend school.  
  
==International rankings==
+
Morocco has about 230,000 students enrolled in fourteen public universities. The most prestigious are Mohammed V University in Rabat and Al Akhawayn University in Ifrane (private). Al-Akhawayn, founded in 1993 by King Hassan II and King Fahd of Saudi Arabia, is an English-medium, American-style university comprising about one thousand students. University of Al Karaouine, in Fez, is the oldest university in the world and has been a center for knowledge for more than a thousand years.
  
* [[Reporters Without Borders#Worldwide press freedom index|world-wide press freedom index 2002]]: Rank 119 out of 167 countries.
+
==Culture==
 +
[[Image:Morocco Woman in Marrekesh.jpg|300px|thumb|right|Moroccan woman in Marrakesh, 2005.]]
  
* [http://www.economist.com/media/pdf/QUALITY_OF_LIFE.pdf worldwide quality-of-life index 2005] - By [[The Economist]] Intelligence Unit's: Rank 65 out of 111 countries
+
Morocco is an ethnically diverse country with a rich [[culture]] and [[civilization]]. Through Moroccan history, Morocco, home of nomadic [[Berber]] tribes, hosted many people coming from the east ([[Phoenicia]]ns, [[Carthage|Carthaginians]], [[Jew]]s, and [[Arab]]s), south ([[Africa]]ns), and north ([[Ancient Rome|Romans]], [[Vandals]], [[Moors]], and Jews). All those civilizations have had an impact.
  
==Affliations==
+
Each region possesses its own uniqueness, contributing to forging a national culture. Morocco has set among its top priorities the protection of its legacy and the preservation of its cultural identity. Ethnically and culturally speaking, Morocco can be considered the least Arabic among Arab countries. Most of its population is of [[Berber]] origins.
  
* [[Image:Flag of the United Nations.svg|30px]] [[United Nations]] - since [[November 12]], [[1956]]
+
===Cuisine===
* [[Image:Flag of the League of Arab States.svg|30px]] [[Arab League]] - since [[October 1]], [[1958]]
+
Moroccan cuisine has long been considered one of the most diversified in the world because of the nation's interaction with the outside world for centuries. It is a mix of Berber, Spanish, Moorish, Middle Eastern, Mediterranean, Jewish, and African influences.
* [[Image:Flag of the Olympic Movement.svg|40px]] [[International Olympic Committee]] - Since 1959
 
* [[Image:Flag of the African Union.svg|30px]] [[Organisation of African Unity]] -  a co-founder in [[May 25]], [[1963]]. Withdrew [[November 12]], [[1984]].
 
* [[Image:G77.jpg|30px]] [[Group of 77]] - since [[June 15]], [[1964]]
 
* [[Image:Flag of OIC.svg|30px]] [[Organization of the Islamic Conference]] - since [[September 22]], [[1969]]
 
* [[Image:Flag of AMU.svg|30px]] [[Arab Maghreb Union]] - since [[February 17]], [[1989]]
 
* [[Image:Wto logo.png|80px]] [[World Trade Organization]] - since [[January 1]], [[1995]]
 
* [[Mediterranean Dialogue]] group - since February 1995
 
* [[Image:Flag of NATO.svg|30px]] [[major non-NATO ally]] - since [[January 19]], [[2004]]
 
  
==Bilateral and multilateral agreements==
+
[[Spice]]s are used extensively in Moroccan food. While spices have been imported for thousands of years, many ingredients, like [[saffron]] from Tiliouine, [[mint]] and [[olive]]s from Meknes, and [[orange (fruit)|orange]]s and [[lemon]]s from Fez, are home-grown. [[Chicken]] is the most widely eaten meat. The most commonly eaten red meat is [[beef]] although [[lamb]] is preferred despite being relatively expensive. Couscous is the most famous Moroccan dish along with ''pastilla,'' ''tajine,'' and ''harira.'' The most popular drink is [[green tea]] with mint.
  
* [[Agadir Agreement]] between Morocco, [[Tunisia]], [[Egypt]] and [[Jordan]]
+
===Literature===
* [[Middle East Free Trade Area]]
+
Moroccan literature is written in Arabic, Berber or French. It also contains literature produced in [[Andalusia]]. Under the [[Almohad]] dynasty Morocco experienced a period of prosperity and brilliance of learning. The Almohad built the Marrakech Kutubiya Mosque, which accommodated twenty-five thousand people but was also famed for its books, manuscripts, libraries, and book shops, which gave it its name. The Almohad Caliph, [[Abu Yakub]], had a great love for collecting book and founded a great library that was eventually turned into a public library.
* [[General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade]]
 
* [[Euro-Mediterranean free trade area]]
 
* [[US-Morocco Free Trade Agreement]]
 
  
==Public holidays==
+
Modern Moroccan literature began in the 1930s, when Morocco's status as a French and Spanish protectorate gave its intellectuals an opportunity to enjoy contact with other Arabic and European literature and to produce literary works freely.
  
{{Main|Public holidays in Morocco}}
+
During the 1950s and 1960s, Morocco was an artistic center and attracted writers such as [[Paul Bowles]], [[Tennessee Williams]], and [[William S. Burroughs]]. Moroccan literature flourished, with novelists such as Mohamed Choukri, who wrote in Arabic, and Driss Chraïbi, who wrote in French. Other important Moroccan authors include Tahar ben Jelloun, Fouad Laroui, Mohammed Berrada, and Leila Abouzeid.
  
==See also==
+
===Music===
 +
Moroccan [[music]] is predominantly [[Arab]], but Andalusian and other imported influences have had a major effect on the country's musical character. Rock-influenced ''chaabi'' bands are widespread, as is trance music with historical origins in [[Muslim]] music.
  
{{portalpar|Morocco|Flag of Morocco.svg}}
+
Morocco is home to Andalusian classical music that is found throughout North Africa. It probably evolved under the [[Moors]] in [[Cordoba]], and the Persian-born musician Ziryab is usually credited with its invention. There are three varieties of Berber folk music: village and ritual music and the music performed by professional musicians. ''Chaabi'' (popular) is music consisting of numerous varieties descended from the multifarious forms of Moroccan folk music. ''Chaabi'' was originally performed in markets but is now found at any celebration or meeting.
{{Main|List of Morocco-related topics}}
 
* [[Berber]]s
 
* [[French Morocco]]
 
* [[History of the Jews in Morocco]]
 
* [[Human rights in Morocco]]
 
* [[Media of Morocco]]
 
* [[Military of Morocco]]
 
* [[Public holidays in Morocco]]
 
* [[Spanish Morocco]]
 
* [[Transportation in Morocco]]
 
* [[Years of lead]]
 
  
==References==
+
==Notes==
 
<references/>
 
<references/>
  
==External links==
+
==References==
{{col-begin}}
 
{{col-2}}
 
  
===Government===
+
* Cutter, Charles Hickman. ''Africa, 2006.'' World Today series. Harpers Ferry, WV: Stryker-Post Publications, 2006. ISBN 1887985727
*[http://www.maroc.ma/PortailInst/An/home Kingdom of Morocco] official portal
+
* Davis, Robert C. ''Christian Slaves, Muslim Masters: White Slavery in the Mediterranean, the Barbary Coast and Italy, 1500-1800.'' (Early Modern History) London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004. ISBN  1403945519
*[http://www.parlement.ma/sitefr Parliament of Morocco] official site (in French and Arabic)
+
* Ellingham, Mark, et al. ''The Rough Guide to Morocco.'' New York, NY: Penguin Putnam, 2001. ISBN 1858286018 
*[http://www.service-public.ma/index.jsp Public services website] (in French and Arabic)
+
* Fremont-Barnes, Gregory. ''Wars of the Barbary Pirates: To the shores of Tripoli: the birth of the US Navy and Marines.'' (Essential Histories) London: Osprey Publishing, 2006. ISBN 1846030307
*[http://www.e-morocco.org e-Morocco] Business Gateway of Morocco in English
+
* Hart, David M. ''Tribe and Society in Rural Morocco.'' (History and Society in the Islamic World) Routeledge, 2000. ISBN 978-0714680736
 +
* London, Joshua. ''Victory in Tripoli: How America's War with the Barbary Pirates Established the U.S. Navy and Shaped a Nation.'' Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2005. ISBN 978-0471444152
 +
* Mayhew, Bradley and Jan Dodd. ''Morocco.'' Melbourne: Lonely Plant Publications, 2003. ISBN 1740593618
 +
* Seward, Pat and Orin Hargraves. ''Morocco.'' Tarrytown, NY: Marshall Cavendish Benchmark, 2006. ISBN 0761420517
  
===News===
+
==External links==
*[http://allafrica.com/morocco/ allAfrica - Morocco] news headline links
+
All links retrieved November 9, 2022.
*[http://www.map.ma/eng Maghreb Arabe Presse] government news agency
+
* ''World Statesmen''. [http://www.worldstatesmen.org/Morocco.htm Morocco].
*[http://www.north-africa.com/one.htm The North Africa Journal] financial news
+
*''British Broadcasting Corporation''. [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/country_profiles/791867.stm Morocco Country profile].
*[http://www.moroccotimes.com Morocco Times] A general news website in English
+
* ''World Factbook''. [https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/countries/morocco/ Morocco].
*[http://www.e-morocco.org e-Morocco] Business Gateway of Morocco in English
+
* ''United States Department of State''. [https://www.state.gov/u-s-relations-with-morocco/ U.S. Relations With Morocco].
*[http://www.marocpost.net MarocPost] Up-to-date news, reviews & dialogues in English
 
*[http://westernsaharaonline.net Pro-Morocco Western Sahara site]
 
  
===Overviews===
 
* [http://www.worldstatesmen.org/Morocco.htm Worldstatesmen.org/Morocco.htm]
 
* [http://www.al-bab.com/maroc/ Arab Gateway &ndash; ''Morocco'']
 
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/country_profiles/791867.stm BBC News &ndash; ''Country Profile: Morocco'']
 
* [http://www.britannica.com/nations/Morocco Encyclopaedia Britannica, ''Morroco'' - Country Page]
 
* [https://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/mo.html CIA World Factbook &ndash; ''Morocco'']
 
* [http://www.state.gov/p/nea/ci/c2416.htm US State Department &ndash; ''Morocco''] includes Background Notes, Country Study and major reports
 
* [http://www.globaladrenaline.com/africa/morocco/ GlobalAdrenaline &ndash; Morocco]
 
* [http://www.professores.uff.br/hjbortol/arquivo/2006.1/applets/morocco_en.html Morocco's location on a 3D globe (Java)]
 
  
===Directories===
+
{{credit|85653769}}
 
 
*[http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/indiv/mideast/cuvlm/Morocco.html Columbia University Libraries &ndash; ''Morocco''] directory category of the WWW-VL
 
* [http://www.moroccolinks.com/ MoroccoLinks.com] directory
 
* [http://dmoz.org/Regional/Africa/Morocco/ Open Directory Project &ndash; ''Morocco''] directory category
 
* [http://www.willgoto.com/324/1/categories.aspx WillGoTo.com &ndash; Morocco] directory category
 
 
 
===Communities===
 
* [http://www.moroccoboard.com  The Moroccan American Community Events Board]
 
* [http://www.marocentrepreneurs.com Maroc Entrepreneurs : Association dedicated to Promotion of Entrepreneurship in Morocco]
 
* [http://www.yabiladi.com/ Moroccans around the world] (portal in French)
 
* [http://www.wafin.com Portal of Moroccans in the U.S.]
 
* [http://rickgold.home.mindspring.com/index.htm Visiting Jewish Morocco] A very complete and informative site about history and culture of Moroccan Jews
 
* [http://www.JeunesDuMaroc.com Portal of young of Morocco]
 
* [http://moroccancongress.org/ moroccancngres]Moroccan Congress of USA The Power of One!
 
* [http://moroccancharity.org moroccancharity]The organization's mission is to engage more people more effectively in volunteer community service to help solve serious social problems
 
 
 
===Trade and external relations===
 
*[http://www.e-morocco.org e-Morocco] Business Gateway of Morocco in English
 
* [http://www.usembassy.ma/usmorrelations/historicalbgrnd.htm Historical Background on United States - Morocco Relations]
 
* [http://europa.eu.int/comm/external_relations/morocco/intro/ The EU's relations with Morocco]
 
* [http://www.moroccanamericantrade.com Moroccan American Trade Council]
 
* [http://www.moroccanamericantrade.com/FTAsummEn.pdf Description of benefits of the Moroccan-American FTA]
 
* [http://www.moroccousafta.com/index_ang.htm Moroccousafta] a site about the Morocco/US Free Trade Agreement
 
* [http://www.legation.org The American Legation in Tangier]
 
 
 
===Surveys on Morocco===
 
* [http://www.geopium.org/Chouvy-JIR-NOV2005-Morocco_said_to_produce_nearly_half_of_the_worlds_hashish_supply.html A recent publication on hashish production and trafficking in the Rif area of Morocco]
 
* [http://www.hrw.org/doc?t=mideast&c=morocc Human Rights Watch on Morocco]
 
* [http://www.upf.edu/cexs/recerca/bioevo/2000BioEvo/BE2000-Bosch-STRs-EJHG.pdf Genetic structure of north-west Africa revealed by STR analysis]
 
 
 
===Tourism and culture===
 
* [http://www.visitmorocco.com/ Official Morocco tourism website]
 
*[http://www.e-morocco.org e-Morocco] Business Gateway of Morocco in English
 
*{{wikitravel}}
 
* Map: [http://www.un.org/Depts/Cartographic/map/profile/morocco.pdf] (pdf); links to more: [http://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps/map_sites/country_sites.html#morocco]
 
* [http://www.moroccosights.com/ Beautiful Pictures of Morocco from MoroccoSights.com]
 
* [http://www.scotbot.org/morocco/ Morocco travel photography]
 
* [http://www.discovermorocco.eu/ Pictures Galleries of Morocco Cities]
 
* [http://www.flickr.com/photos/tags/morocco/show/ Pictures of Morocco from flickr]
 
* [http://www.allied-media.com/album/festival The Moroccan Festival in Washington]
 
* [http://lexicorient.com/morocco/index.htm Morocco in Lexicorient]
 
* [http://www.essaouiratourisme.com/ essaouira city, morocco wind city]
 
* [http://www.magicmorocco.com/ The Magic Morocco]
 
* [http://www.allied-media.com/album/trone  Morocco National Day Festivities]
 
* [http://www.reise-photografie.de/marokko.htm Images of Morocco]
 
* [http://www.a1linux.com/gallery/main.php?g2_view=core.ShowItem&g2_itemId=2712 More pictures of Morocco]
 
* [http://www.teline.fr/index.en.php Biodiversity of South Western Morocco (Flora and Plant Communities of Morocco)]
 
{{col-2}}
 
[[Image:Rabat city walls.jpg|thumb|City walls in [[Rabat]]]]
 
 
 
{{sisterlinks|Morocco}}
 
 
 
{{col-end}}
 
 
 
{{Morocco}}
 
{{Africa}}
 
  
[[Category: Nations and places]]
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[[Category:Geography]]
 
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[[Category:Countries]]
{{credit|85653769}}
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[[Category:Africa]]

Latest revision as of 13:14, 10 March 2023

المملكة المغربية
ⵜⴰⴳⵍⴷⵉⵜ ⵏ ⵍⵎⴰⵖⵔⵉⴱ
Kingdom of Morocco
Flag of Morocco Coat of arms of Morocco
Mottoالله، الوطن، الملك (Arabic)
Allāh, al-Waṭan, al-Malik
ⴰⴽⵓⵛ . ⴰⵎⵓⵔ . ⴰⴳⵍⵍⵉⴷ (Berber)
Akuc, Amur, Agellid
"God, Homeland, King"
'Anthem: 'النشيد الوطني المغربي
"Cherifian Anthem"
Location of Morocco
The fully green area shows the internationally recognized territory of Morocco. The striped area is the disputed territory of Western Sahara; Morocco administers most of this territory as its de facto Southern Provinces.
CapitalRabat
34°02′N 6°51′W / 34.033, -6.85
Largest city Casablanca
Official languages Arabic,[1] Berber[2][a]
Native languages Moroccan Arabic, Tachelhit, Central Atlas Tamazight Tarifit, Hassaniya.
Ethnic groups  Arab-Berber 99%, other 1% [3]
Demonym Moroccan
Government Unitary parliamentary democracy and Constitutional Monarchy
 -  King Mohammed VI
 -  Prime Minister Aziz Akhannouch
Legislature Parliament
 -  Upper House Assembly of Councillors
 -  Lower House Assembly of Representatives
Monarchy 110 B.C.E. 
 -  Kingdom of Mauretania 110 B.C.E. – 40 C.E. 
 -  Alaouite dynasty 1666–modern day 
 -  Independence from France March 2, 1956 
 -  Independence from Spain April 7, 1956 
Area
 -  Total 446,550 km² [b] or 710,850 km²[b](58th/40th)
172,487 sq mi 
 -  Water (%) 250 km² (0,056%)
Population
 -  2021 estimate 37,345,000[4] (39th)
 -  2014 census 33.848.242[5] 
 -  Density 50.0/km² 
189.3/sq mi
GDP (PPP) 2019 estimate
 -  Total $332.358 billion[6] 
 -  Per capita $9,339[6] 
GDP (nominal) 2019 estimate
 -  Total $122.458 billion[6] 
 -  Per capita $3,441[6] 
Gini (2015) 40.3[7] 
Currency Moroccan dirham (MAD)
Time zone WET (UTC+0)
 -  Summer (DST) WEST (UTC+1)
Internet TLD .ma
Calling code [[++212]]
a. ^  French is also used in official government documents and by the business community, although it has no official status.
b. ^  446,550 km² (172,410 sq mi) excludes all disputed territories.
710,850 km² (274,460 sq mi) Includes Moroccan-administered territory of Western Sahara which is claimed by the Polisario Front as the Sahrawi Republic


The Kingdom of Morocco is a country in North Africa. The full Arabic name of the country (Al-Mamlaka al-Maghribiya) translates to The Western Kingdom. Al Maghrib (meaning The West) is commonly used. Historians used to refer to Morocco as Al Maghrib al Aqşá (The Furthest West), referring to its location at the northwestern tip of the continent, bordering both the Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea.

Morocco is an ethnically diverse country with a rich culture and civilization. Though Morocco hosted many peoples over the centuries, from the ancient Phoenicians to modern-day France, its Berber population retained its identity, retreating to the mountains when necessary.

The king is viewed as spiritual leader of the country and dominates political life as well. In the past decade, he has introduced a number of reforms in the areas of human rights, the status of women, and economic liberalization. These reforms are in some ways ahead of its Arab neighbors.

Geography

Ouzoud Falls

At 172,402 square miles (446,550 sq. km), Morocco is comparable in size to Iraq and somewhat larger than the U.S. state of California. It has a long coastline on the Atlantic Ocean that reaches past the Strait of Gibraltar into the Mediterranean Sea. Morocco borders Algeria to the east, the Mediterranean Sea and a relatively thin water border with Spain to the north and the Atlantic Ocean to its west. Because Morocco controls part of the Strait of Gibraltar, it has power over the passage in and out of the Mediterranean. The border to the south is disputed. Morocco claims ownership of Western Sahara and has administered most of the territory since 1975.

There are four Spanish enclaves on the Mediterranean coast: Ceuta, Melilla, Peñón de Vélez de la Gomera, Peñón de Alhucemas, as well as the Chafarinas islands and the disputed islet Perejil. Off Morocco's Atlantic coast the Canary Islands belong to Spain, whereas Madeira to the north is Portuguese.

The coastal area rises to the Rif Mountains, which occupy the region in the north bordering the Mediterranean, running from the northwest to the northeast. Farther south, the Atlas Mountains run down the backbone of the country, from the southwest to the northeast. Most of the southeastern portion of the country lies in the Sahara Desert and thus is sparsely populated and unproductive economically. Most of the population lives in the north. The fertile coastal plains comprise the backbone for agriculture. Forests cover about 12 percent of the land, while arable land accounts for 18 percent and 5 percent is irrigated.

Morocco's capital city is Rabat, and its largest city is the main port of Casablanca. Other cities include Agadir, Essaouira, Fes, Marrakech, Meknes, Mohammadia, Oujda, Ouarzazat, Safi, Salè, Tangier, Tiznit, and Tan-Tan.

Climate

The climate is quite varied, from Mediterranean on the coast to extreme heat and cold in the interior regions, where it is mountainous or desert. Rainfall occurs from October to May, and summers are dry. Rainfall varies from 15 to 29 inches (38 to 74 cm) in the north but averages only 4 inches (10 cm) in the Sahara.

Flora and fauna

Morocco is known for its wildlife biodiversity, with birds representing the most important fauna. Morocco has a total of 487 species, of which 32 are rare or accidental. Lizards, chameleons, geckos, and snakes are common reptiles. Mammals are represented by wild boars, foxes, the Barbary ape (a type of monkey), and small mammals that can survive in the desert.

The country has a variety of habitats: from snow-covered mountain peaks to scorching, arid deserts to fertile plains. The slopes of the mountains are covered with evergreen oak and cedar. East and south of the Atlas Mountains, scrubby steppe and desert vegetation is found, including date palms.

History

Archaeological evidence indicates the presence of Homo erectus in the area of modern Morocco about two hundred thousand years ago and of modern people since Neolithic times, a period when rainfall was more plentiful than the present. Two groups seem to have appeared in Northern Africa between roughly 15,000 and 10,000 B.C.E., the Oranians and the Capsians. The Berbers are thought to have resulted from a fusion of these two peoples.

North Africa and Morocco were slowly drawn into the wider emerging Mediterranean world by Phoenician trading colonies and settlements, starting in the eighth century B.C.E. and lasting until the third century B.C.E. The arrival of Phoenicians heralded a long engagement with the wider Mediterranean, as this strategic region formed part of the Roman Empire, known as Mauretania Tingitana. In the fifth century C.E., as the Roman Empire declined, the region fell to the Vandals, Visigoths, and then Byzantine Greeks in rapid succession. During this time, however, the high mountains of most of modern Morocco remained unsubdued and stayed in the hands of their Berber inhabitants.

Early Islamic Morocco

Koutoba Mosque, Marrakesh, Morocco.

By the seventh century, the Arabs were in full expansion. In 670, the first Arab invasions of the North African coastal plain took place under Uqba ibn Nafi, a general serving under the Umayyads of Damascus. He swept with his army into what is now Morocco in the year 683 and called the area "Maghreb al Aqsa" or "The Far West."

The Arabs brought their customs, culture, and Islam, to which most of the Berbers converted. The country soon broke away from the control of the distant Abbasid caliphs in Baghdad under Idris ibn Abdallah, who founded the Idrisid Dynasty. The Idrisids established Fez as their capital, and Morocco became a center of learning and a major regional power.

Influence in Spain

Morocco reached its height under a series of Berber-origin dynasties that replaced the Arab Idrisids. In the eighth century under first the Almoravids, then the Almohads, the Moors of Morocco ruled most of northwestern Africa, as well as large sections of Islamic Iberia, called Al-Andalus or Andalusia. Cordoba became the capital, and was made into the most opulent city in Europe. Under 600 years of Islamic rule, Spanish cities such as Seville and Granada were places where the citizenry prospered under a tolerant rule that also focused on scholarly advances in science, mathematics, astronomy, geography, and medicine.

Islamic rule in the Iberian Peninsula ended in the fifteenth century with the fall of Granada under Muhammad XII, who held out fighting for 12 years, to the Spanish Royal Army of King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella. Under the Catholic Inquisition, Spanish troops pillaged Granada among other Islamic cities. Rather than face possible execution, many Muslims and Jews fled to Morocco. The Inquisitors, eager to abolish any trace of Islamic culture, destroyed the libraries in Muslim Spain, where thousands of priceless texts were kept.

Smaller states of the region, such as the Berghouata and Banu Isam, were conquered. The empire collapsed, however, with a long-running series of civil wars.

The Alaouite Dynasty eventually gained control. Morocco was facing aggression from Spain and the Ottoman Empire, which was sweeping westward. The Alaouites succeeded in stabilizing their position, and while the kingdom was smaller than previous ones in the region it remained quite wealthy. In 1684, it annexed Tangier.

Barbary Coast

The Muslim coast of North Africa, including Morocco, was called the Barbary Coast, named for the Berber tribes in the area. From the 1500s, piracy abounded, with Europeans as the main target. By the beginning of the American Revolution, American merchant ships were subject to attack by Barbary pirates in the Atlantic Ocean, a serious threat to the survival of the fledgling republic. In 1777, Morocco's sultan declared that American merchant ships would be under his protection and enjoy safe passage. The United States legation (consulate) in Tangier is the first property the American government ever owned abroad. It now houses a museum. But this attempt to deal with pirates by paying them off, as the Europeans had chosen to do for decades, was successfully increasing the problem. But by 1801, the First Barbary War was in progress, an attempt to make the seas a safe place to travel. The Second Barbary War, 1819, was necessary before the problem was solved.

European influence

Successful Portuguese efforts to control the Atlantic coast in the fifteenth century did not profoundly affect the Mediterranean heart of Morocco. After the Napoleonic Wars, Egypt and the Maghreb became increasingly ungovernable from Constantinople, the resort of pirates under local beys, and, as Europe industrialized, an increasingly prized site for colonization. The Maghreb had far greater proven wealth than the unknown rest of Africa and a location of strategic importance affecting the exit from the Mediterranean Sea.

For the first time, Morocco became a state of some interest to the European powers. France exhibited this as early as 1830. Recognition in 1904 by the United Kingdom of France's sphere of influence in Morocco provoked a German reaction; the crisis of June 1905 was resolved at the Algeciras Conference in 1906, which formalized France's "special position" and entrusted policing of Morocco to France and Spain jointly. A second Moroccan crisis provoked by Berlin increased tensions between European powers. The Treaty of Fez (signed in 1912) made Morocco a protectorate of France. By the same treaty, Spain assumed the role of protecting power over the northern and southern Saharan zones.

Many Moroccan soldiers who served in the French army assisted European and American troops in both World War I and World War II.

Resistance

Nationalist political parties, which subsequently arose under the French protectorate, based their arguments for Moroccan independence on such World War II declarations as the Atlantic Charter (that set forth, among other things, the right of all people to choose the form of government under which they live). A manifesto of the Istiqlal Party (Independence Party) in 1944 was one of the earliest public demands for independence. That party subsequently provided most of the leadership for the nationalist movement.

France's exile of Sultan Mohammed V in 1953 to Madagascar and his replacement by the unpopular Mohammed Ben Aarafa, whose reign was perceived as illegitimate, sparked active opposition to the French protectorate all over the country. The most notable occurred in Oujda, where Moroccans attacked French and other European residents in the streets. Operations by the newly created "Army of Liberation" were launched in 1955. The "Army of Liberation" was created by the Arab Maghreb Liberation Committee in Cairo, Egypt, to constitute a resistance movement against occupation, like the National Liberation Front in Algeria. Its goal was the return of King Mohammed V and the liberation of Algeria and Tunisia as well. France allowed Mohammed V to return in 1955, and the negotiations that led to Moroccan independence began the following year.

Those events helped increase the sense of solidarity between the people and the newly returned king. For this reason, the revolution in Morocco was called the Revolution of the King and the People and is celebrated every August 20.

Independence

Morocco recovered its political independence from France on March 2, 1956 and on April 7 of that year France officially relinquished its protectorate in Morocco. Through agreements with Spain in 1956 and 1958, Moroccan control over certain Spanish-ruled areas was restored, though attempts to claim other Spanish colonial possessions through military action were less successful. The internationalized city of Tangier was reintegrated with the signing of the Tangier Protocol on October 29, 1956.

Hassan II became king of Morocco on March 3, 1961. His rule would be marked by political unrest. Tentative political reform in the 1990s resulted in the establishment of a bicameral legislature directly elected by the people in 1997. King Hassan died in 1999 and was succeeded by his son, Mohamed VI, who pledged to continue steps toward liberalization. The government has undertaken a number of economic, political, and social reforms, including creation in 2006 of the Equity and Reconciliation Commission, which investigated allegations of human rights abuse from 1956 to 1999.

The 2002 legislative elections were based on party lists, but 10 percent of the seats were set aside for females. Reform of the Family Code, or Mudawana, was pushed through the legislature by the king in 2004. The new code asserts the equality of men and women, raises the age of consent to marriage for girls to eighteen, and makes polygamy impossible to practice.

In 2003, Morocco's largest city, Casablanca, suffered from terrorist attacks targeted against Western and Jewish places. In 2006, Morocco celebrated its fiftieth anniversary of independence.

Politics

Different maps used to illustrate the area of Morocco, with and without Western Sahara.

Morocco is a de jure constitutional monarchy, with an elected parliament. The king, with vast executive powers, can dissolve government and deploy the military, among other responsibilities. Opposition political parties are legal and several have arisen in recent years.

Politics takes place in a framework of a parliamentary constitutional monarchy, in which the prime minister is the head of government, and of a pluriform, multi-party system. Executive power is exercised by the government. Legislative power is vested in both the government and the two chambers of parliament, the Assembly of Representatives of Morocco and the Assembly of Councillors. The Moroccan constitution provides for a monarchy with a Parliament and an independent judiciary.

The constitution grants the king extensive powers; he is both the political leader and the "Defender of the Faith." He presides over the Council of Ministers; appoints the prime minister following legislative elections, and on recommendations from the latter, appoints the members of the government. While the constitution theoretically allows the king to terminate the tenure of any minister and, after consultation with the heads of the higher and lower Assemblies, to dissolve the Parliament, suspend the constitution, call for new elections, or rule by decree, the only time this happened was in 1965. The king is formally the chief of the military. Upon the death of his father Mohammed V, King Hassan II succeeded to the throne in 1961. He ruled Morocco for the next 38 years, until he died in 1999. His son, King Mohamed VI, assumed the throne in July 1999.

In 2011, following widespread protests, a new constitution was approved and took effect on July 29, 2011. Key reforms include: the king is no longer "sacred" although still "inviolable" (cannot be critized); the king will select a prime minister from the party that wins the most seats in parliament; the prime minister is the head of government (not the king) with the power to dissolve the lower house of parliament; the Berber language is an official state language along with Arabic; and women are guaranteed "civic and social" equality with men (previously, they had only "political" equality).[8]

Human rights

City walls in Rabat

Morocco's history after independence, under the reign of Hassan II, was marked by a period of politically motivated persecutions and executions.

However, under the reign of Mohammed VI, and with the launch of the Equity and Reconciliation Commission (IER) to investigate the atrocities, Morocco is trying to reconcile with the victims. Many new laws and codes concerning all aspects of life are being launched. The most notable event was the creation of the Mudawana—a family code that was the first unique initiative of its kind in the Arab and Muslim world. The code gives women more rights. Other issues, such as the abolition of capital punishment, are being considered.

Despite improvements under Mohammed VI, international organizations have continued to criticize the human rights situation in Morocco in general (arrests of suspected Islamist extremists during 2004 and 2005 related to the 2003 Casablanca bombings), and in Western Sahara in particular.

Media

The government of Morocco owns many key media outlets, including radio and television. Moroccans have access to approximately 2,000 domestic and foreign publications. The Moroccan press agency, Maghreb Arab Press, and one Arabic daily newspaper, Al-Anbaa, are official organs of the government. One additional Arabic daily newspaper, Assahra Al Maghribia, and one French-language daily newspaper, Le Matin, are semi-official organs of the government. Morocco has 27 AM radio stations, 25 FM radio stations, six shortwave stations, and five television stations.

Although journalists continue to practice self-censorship, opposition dailies have begun to explore social and political issues that have traditionally been considered out of bounds, but the media continue to exercise great caution when discussing government corruption, human rights, and Morocco’s policy toward Western Sahara.

The Committee to Protect Journalists in 2007 designated Morocco as one of the world's worst backsliders on press freedom, noting that independent journalists have been the targets of a series of politicized court cases, financial pressures, and harassment from authorities. In July 2007, the publisher of an independent weekly and one of his reporters were charged with possessing classified documents after they published a secret government document regarding terrorist threats against Morocco.

Foreign relations

Morocco is a moderate Arab state that maintains close relations with Europe and the United States and is active in Maghreb, Arab, and African affairs. It belongs to the Arab League, Arab Maghreb Union, Organization of the Islamic Conference, and the Non-Aligned Movement. Although not a member of the African Union, Morocco contributes to U.N. peacekeeping efforts on the continent.

Morocco supports the search for peace and moderation in the Middle East. In 1986, then-King Hassan II took the daring step of inviting then-Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres for talks, becoming only the second Arab leader to host an Israeli leader. Following the September 1993 signing of the Israeli-Palestinian Declaration of Principles, Morocco accelerated its economic ties and political contacts with Israel. In September 1994, Morocco and Israel announced the opening of bilateral liaison offices. These offices were closed in 2000 following sustained Israeli-Palestinian violence, but Moroccan-Israeli diplomatic contacts continue.

Morocco was the first Arab state to condemn Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait in 1990 and sent troops to help defend Saudi Arabia. It maintains close relations with Saudi Arabia and the Persian Gulf states, which have provided Morocco with substantial amounts of financial assistance. Morocco has also supported efforts to stabilize Iraq following the downfall of Saddam Hussein.

As far as relations with the United States, Morocco was the first country to seek diplomatic relations with the young country in 1777 and remains one of its closest allies in the region. As a stable, democratizing, and liberalizing Arab Muslim nation, Morocco is important for U.S. interests in the Middle East.

Morocco was among the first Arab and Islamic states to denounce the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks in the United States and declare solidarity with the American people in the war against terror. Morocco has seen its own terrorism at home as well. On May 16, 2003, Moroccan suicide bombers simultaneously attacked five sites in Casablanca, killing more than forty people and wounding over a hundred. More than a million people subsequently demonstrated to condemn the attacks.

Western Sahara

A detailed map showing the areas administered by Morocco in Western Sahara

The major issue in Morocco's foreign relations is its claim to Western Sahara, a former Spanish territory to the south. As a result of Algeria's continued support for the Polisario Front in the dispute over Western Sahara, relations between Morocco and Algeria have remained strained over the past several decades, although they have full diplomatic relations and there is periodic high-level contact between the two countries.

Morocco's claim to sovereignty over the Western Sahara is based largely on a historical argument of traditional loyalty of the Sahrawi tribal leaders to the Moroccan sultan as spiritual leader and ruler. The Polisario claims to represent the aspirations of the Western Saharan inhabitants for independence. Algeria claims none of the territory for itself but maintains that Sahrawis should determine the territory's future status. Morocco has sent in settlers to reinforce its claim and built a fortified berm around three-fourths of Western Sahara. It has de facto administrative control over 80 percent of the territory.

The United Nations continues to explore ways of arriving at a mutually agreed political settlement and to promote confidence-building measures between the parties in the interim. Talks in August 2007 ended with the parties agreeing that the status quo is unacceptable and negotiations will continue.

Administrative divisions

Morocco is divided into sixteen regions. As part of a 1997 decentralization/regionalization law passed by the legislature, sixteen new regions were created. Due to the conflict over Western Sahara, the status of both regions of Laâyoune-Boujdour-Sakia El Hamra and Oued Ed-Dahab-Lagouira is disputed.

Economy

The central bank of Morocco (Bank Al Maghrib)

Morocco has the largest reserves of phosphates in the world and mining and processing it (into fertilizers and phosphoric acid) are its largest industry. Its second largest source of income is from nationals living abroad who transfer money to relatives living in Morocco. The country's third largest source of revenue is tourism.

Moroccan economic policies brought macroeconomic stability to the country in the early 1990s but have not spurred growth sufficient to reduce unemployment, which overall is 7.7 percent (2006 est.) but nears 20 percent in urban areas. Poverty has increased due to Morocco's continued dependence on foreign energy and its inability to promote the growth of small and medium size enterprises. However, GDP growth rebounded to 6.7 percent in 2006 due to high rainfall, which resulted in a strong second harvest. Petroleum has been discovered in the southeast, and the government revised its investment code to encourage exploration and development of oil reserves, which would reduce the nation's dependence on costly imports.

Moroccan authorities understand that reducing poverty and providing jobs are key to domestic security and development. In 2004, they instituted measures to boost foreign direct investment and trade by signing a free trade agreement with the United States that became effective in January 2006. The agreement allows 98 percent of the two-way trade of consumer and industrial products to be tariff free. A similar agreement with the European Union is scheduled to take effect in 2010, and a free trade agreement has also been signed with Egypt, Tunisia, and Jordan. Morocco also established new commercial ties with China and sold government shares in the state telecommunications company and the largest state-owned bank.

Long-term challenges include preparing the economy for freer trade with the United States and European Union, improving education and job prospects for Morocco's youth, and raising living standards, which the government hopes to achieve by increasing tourism and boosting competitiveness in textiles.

The main industries, in addition to tourism and phosphate rock mining and processing, are food processing, leather goods, textiles, and construction. Industry comprises about a third of GDP, with agriculture contributing 13 percent and services 55 percent. GDP per capita is $4,600 (2006 est.). A fifth of the population lives below the poverty line, but the percentage is higher in rural areas than in the cities.

Morocco is a major grower of wheat, barley, beans, sugar beets, and citrus fruits, but productivity is erratic due to frequent droughts. One of the government's priorities is increasing the amount of irrigated farmland.

Morocco ranks among the world’s largest producers and exporters of cannabis, and its cultivation and sale provide the economic base for much of the population of the Rif Mountains in northern Morocco, a region that is isolated, underdeveloped, and impoverished. The cannabis is typically processed into hashish, most of which is exported to Algeria or Tunisia and smuggled to Spain, Portugal, and France.

Demographics

Ethnolinguistic Groups in Morocco
Tangier, Morocco,

Modern genetic analyses have confirmed that various populations have contributed to the present-day population of Morocco, including, in addition to the main ethnic groups—Berbers and ArabsPhoenicians, Sephardic Jews, and sub-Saharan Africans.

The Arabs invaded Morocco in the seventh century and established their culture. Today Morocco is the fourth most populous Arab country, after Egypt, Sudan, and Algeria. Most Moroccans are Sunni Muslims of Arab, Berber, or mixed Arab-Berber stock. The Jewish minority has decreased significantly and now numbers about five thousand. Most of the foreign residents are French or Spanish; many are teachers, technicians, or retirees, especially in Marrakesh.

Most people live west of the Atlas Mountains, a range that insulates the country from the Sahara Desert. Casablanca is the center of commerce and industry and the leading port; Rabat is the seat of government; Tangier is the gateway to Morocco from Spain and also a major port; Fez is the cultural and religious center; and the dominantly Berber Marrakesh is a major tourist center.

Language

Morocco's official language is classical Arabic but most of its people speak a distinctive dialect called Moroccan Arabic. Approximately 40 percent of the population, mostly in rural areas, speak one of three different dialects of Berber either as a first language or bilingually with the spoken Arabic dialect. French, which remains Morocco's unofficial second language, is taught universally and still serves as Morocco's primary language of commerce and economics. It also is widely used in education and government.

About twenty thousand Moroccans in the north speak Spanish as a second language. English, while still far behind French and Spanish in terms of number of speakers, is rapidly becoming the foreign language of choice among educated youth. As a result of reforms implemented in 2002, English will be taught in all public schools.

Education

Education in Morocco is free and compulsory through primary school. Nevertheless, many children—particularly girls in rural areas—do not attend school.

Morocco has about 230,000 students enrolled in fourteen public universities. The most prestigious are Mohammed V University in Rabat and Al Akhawayn University in Ifrane (private). Al-Akhawayn, founded in 1993 by King Hassan II and King Fahd of Saudi Arabia, is an English-medium, American-style university comprising about one thousand students. University of Al Karaouine, in Fez, is the oldest university in the world and has been a center for knowledge for more than a thousand years.

Culture

Moroccan woman in Marrakesh, 2005.

Morocco is an ethnically diverse country with a rich culture and civilization. Through Moroccan history, Morocco, home of nomadic Berber tribes, hosted many people coming from the east (Phoenicians, Carthaginians, Jews, and Arabs), south (Africans), and north (Romans, Vandals, Moors, and Jews). All those civilizations have had an impact.

Each region possesses its own uniqueness, contributing to forging a national culture. Morocco has set among its top priorities the protection of its legacy and the preservation of its cultural identity. Ethnically and culturally speaking, Morocco can be considered the least Arabic among Arab countries. Most of its population is of Berber origins.

Cuisine

Moroccan cuisine has long been considered one of the most diversified in the world because of the nation's interaction with the outside world for centuries. It is a mix of Berber, Spanish, Moorish, Middle Eastern, Mediterranean, Jewish, and African influences.

Spices are used extensively in Moroccan food. While spices have been imported for thousands of years, many ingredients, like saffron from Tiliouine, mint and olives from Meknes, and oranges and lemons from Fez, are home-grown. Chicken is the most widely eaten meat. The most commonly eaten red meat is beef although lamb is preferred despite being relatively expensive. Couscous is the most famous Moroccan dish along with pastilla, tajine, and harira. The most popular drink is green tea with mint.

Literature

Moroccan literature is written in Arabic, Berber or French. It also contains literature produced in Andalusia. Under the Almohad dynasty Morocco experienced a period of prosperity and brilliance of learning. The Almohad built the Marrakech Kutubiya Mosque, which accommodated twenty-five thousand people but was also famed for its books, manuscripts, libraries, and book shops, which gave it its name. The Almohad Caliph, Abu Yakub, had a great love for collecting book and founded a great library that was eventually turned into a public library.

Modern Moroccan literature began in the 1930s, when Morocco's status as a French and Spanish protectorate gave its intellectuals an opportunity to enjoy contact with other Arabic and European literature and to produce literary works freely.

During the 1950s and 1960s, Morocco was an artistic center and attracted writers such as Paul Bowles, Tennessee Williams, and William S. Burroughs. Moroccan literature flourished, with novelists such as Mohamed Choukri, who wrote in Arabic, and Driss Chraïbi, who wrote in French. Other important Moroccan authors include Tahar ben Jelloun, Fouad Laroui, Mohammed Berrada, and Leila Abouzeid.

Music

Moroccan music is predominantly Arab, but Andalusian and other imported influences have had a major effect on the country's musical character. Rock-influenced chaabi bands are widespread, as is trance music with historical origins in Muslim music.

Morocco is home to Andalusian classical music that is found throughout North Africa. It probably evolved under the Moors in Cordoba, and the Persian-born musician Ziryab is usually credited with its invention. There are three varieties of Berber folk music: village and ritual music and the music performed by professional musicians. Chaabi (popular) is music consisting of numerous varieties descended from the multifarious forms of Moroccan folk music. Chaabi was originally performed in markets but is now found at any celebration or meeting.

Notes

  1. Lahcen Achy, Morocco: Reform as a path to a genuine constitutional monarchy Los Angeles Times, June 7, 2011. Retrieved February 15, 2022.
  2. Morocco's King Mohammed unveils constitutional reforms BBC News, June 18, 2011. Retrieved February 15, 2022.
  3. CIA, Morocco World Factbook. Retrieved February 15, 2022.
  4. Morocco - Total population Knoema. Retrieved February 15, 2022.
  5. Population légale Haut Commissariat au Plan (HCP). Retrieved February 15, 2022.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 Morocco IMF.
  7. Africa's Development Dynamics 2018:Growth, Jobs and Inequalities AUC/OECD. Retrieved February 15, 2022.
  8. Q&A: Morocco's referendum on reform BBC News, June 29, 2011. Retrieved February 15, 2022.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Cutter, Charles Hickman. Africa, 2006. World Today series. Harpers Ferry, WV: Stryker-Post Publications, 2006. ISBN 1887985727
  • Davis, Robert C. Christian Slaves, Muslim Masters: White Slavery in the Mediterranean, the Barbary Coast and Italy, 1500-1800. (Early Modern History) London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004. ISBN 1403945519
  • Ellingham, Mark, et al. The Rough Guide to Morocco. New York, NY: Penguin Putnam, 2001. ISBN 1858286018
  • Fremont-Barnes, Gregory. Wars of the Barbary Pirates: To the shores of Tripoli: the birth of the US Navy and Marines. (Essential Histories) London: Osprey Publishing, 2006. ISBN 1846030307
  • Hart, David M. Tribe and Society in Rural Morocco. (History and Society in the Islamic World) Routeledge, 2000. ISBN 978-0714680736
  • London, Joshua. Victory in Tripoli: How America's War with the Barbary Pirates Established the U.S. Navy and Shaped a Nation. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2005. ISBN 978-0471444152
  • Mayhew, Bradley and Jan Dodd. Morocco. Melbourne: Lonely Plant Publications, 2003. ISBN 1740593618
  • Seward, Pat and Orin Hargraves. Morocco. Tarrytown, NY: Marshall Cavendish Benchmark, 2006. ISBN 0761420517

External links

All links retrieved November 9, 2022.


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