PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Kingdom of Morocco
Geography
Location: North Africa, bordering the Atlantic
Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea, southern border
with Western Sahara, eastern border with
Algeria.
Area: 446,550 sq. km. (172,413 sq. mi.) slightly
larger than California. (The disputed territory
of Western Sahara comprises another 267,028 sq.
km or 102,703 sq. mi.)
Cities: Rabat (capital), Casablanca, Marrakech,
Fes, Meknes, Tangier.
Terrain: Coastal plains, mountains, desert.
Climate: Mediterranean to more extreme in the
interior and south.
Land use: Arable
land 19%; permanent
crops 2%; other 79%.
People
Nationality: Noun
and adjective--Moroccan(s).
Population (2007): 33,757,175. (The population
of disputed territory Western Sahara is
350,000.)
Annual growth rate (2007): 1.528%. Birth
rate (2007
est.)--21.64 births/1,000 population; death
rate (2007
est.)--5.54 deaths/1,000 population.
Ethnic groups: Arab-Berber 99%.
Religions: Muslim 99.99%, Jewish population
estimated at 4,000 people, Christian population
estimated at less than 1,000.
Languages: Arabic (official), several Berber
dialects; French functions as the language of
business, government, and diplomacy.
Education: Years
compulsory--9. Literacy (age
15 and over can read and write)--total
population 51.7%; female 39.4% (2003 est.).
Health: Infant
mortality rate (2007
est.)--38.85/1,000. Life
expectancy at birth (2007
est.)--total population 71.22 yrs., male 68.88
yrs., female 73.67 yrs.
Work force (2006): 11.25 million.
Unemployment rate (2006 est.): 7.7%.
Government
Type: Constitutional monarchy.
Constitution: March 1972, revised September 1992
and September 1996 (creating a bicameral
legislature).
Independence: March 2, 1956.
Branches: Executive--King
(head of state), Prime Minister (head of
government). Legislative--Bicameral
Parliament. Judicial--Supreme
Court.
Major political parties: Socialist Union of
Popular Forces (USFP), Istiqlal (Independence)
Party (PI), Party of Justice and Development (PJD),
National Rally of Independents (RNI), Popular
Movement (MP), National Popular Movement (MNP),
Constitutional Union Party (UC), Democratic
Forces Front, (FFD), National Democratic Party (PND),
Party of Progress and Socialism (PPS),
Democratic Union (UD), Democratic and Social
Movement (MDS), Social Democratic Party (PSD),
The Pact (AHD), Liberty Alliance (ADL), United
Socialist Leftists (GSU), Moroccan Liberal Party
(PML), Party of Reform and Development (PRD),
Citizen Forces (FC), National Itihadi (Unity)
Congress (CNI), Party of Action (PA), Social
Center Party (PCS), Party of Environment and
Development (PED), Citizens Initiative for
Development (ICD), Party of Renewal and Equity
(PRE), Consultation and Independence Party
(PCI), Advancing Democratic and Social Party (PAGDS).
Suffrage: Universal starting at 18 years of age.
Economy
GDP (2006): $56.72 billion.
GDP growth rate (2006 est.): 6.7%
Per capita GDP (PPP, 2006): $4,400.
Natural resources: Phosphates, fish, manganese,
lead, silver, and copper.
Agriculture: Products--barley,
citrus fruits, vegetables, olives, livestock,
and fishing.
Industry: Types--phosphate
mining, manufacturing and handicrafts,
construction and public works, energy. Sector
Information as % GDP (2006): Agriculture 13.3%,
industry 31.2%, services 55.5%.
Monetary unit: Moroccan dirham.
Trade: Exports--$11.72
billion (2006). Major
partners--EU 71.5%, India 4.1%, U.S. 2.6%,
and Brazil 2.4%. Imports--
$21.22 billion (2006). Major
partners--EU 52.1%, Saudi Arabia 4.8%,
Russia 6.7%, China 5.2%, U.S. 3.4%.
Budget: Revenues,
$15.85 billion; expenditures,
$20.39 billion, including capital expenditures
of $2.19 billion. (2006 est.). External debt:
$17.9 billion (2006 est.).
PEOPLE
Moroccans are predominantly Sunni Muslims of
Arab, Berber, or mixed Arab-Berber ancestry. The
Arabs brought Islam, along with Arabic language
and culture, to the region from the Arabian
Peninsula during the Muslim conquests of the 7th
century. Today, there remains a Jewish community
of approximately 5,000, and a largely expatriate
Christian population of 5,000, who enjoy
religious freedom and full civil rights. Morocco
is also home to a 300-500-person Baha'i
community which, in recent years, has been able
to worship free from government interference.
Arabic is Morocco's official language, but
French is widely taught and serves as the
primary language of commerce and government.
Moroccan colloquial Arabic is composed of a
unique combination of Arabic, Berber and French
dialects. Along with Arabic, about 10 million
Moroccans, predominantly in rural areas, also
speak one of the three Moroccan Berber dialects
(Tarifit, Tashelhit, and Tamazight). Spanish is
also used in the northern part of the country.
English is rapidly becoming the foreign language
of choice among educated youth and is offered in
all public schools from the fourth year on.
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 Spain
and also a major port; "Arab" Fes is the
cultural and religious center; and "Berber"
Marrakech is a major tourist center.
Education in Morocco is free and compulsory
through primary school (age 15). Nevertheless,
many children--particularly girls in rural
areas--do not attend school. The country's
literacy rate reveals sharp gaps in education,
both in terms of gender and location; while
country-wide literacy rates are estimated at 39%
among women and 64% among men, the female
literacy rate in rural areas is only 10%.
Morocco is home to 14 public universities.
Mohammed V University in Rabat is one of the
country's most famous schools, with faculties of
law, sciences, liberal arts, and medicine.
Karaouine University, in Fes, is a longstanding
center for Islamic studies and is the oldest
university in the Maghreb. Morocco has one
private, English language university, Al-Akhawayn,
in Ifrane, founded in 1993 by King Hassan II and
King Fahd of Saudi Arabia. The curriculum is
based on an American model.
HISTORY
Morocco's strategic location has shaped its
history. Beginning with the Phoenicians, many
foreigners were drawn to this area. Romans,
Visigoths, Vandals and Byzantine Greeks ruled
successively. Arab forces began occupying
Morocco in the seventh century A.D., bringing
their civilization and Islam. The Alaouite
dynasty, which has ruled Morocco since 1649,
claims descent from the Prophet Muhammad.
Morocco's location and resources led to early
competition among European powers in Africa,
beginning with successful Portuguese efforts to
control the Atlantic coast in the 15th century.
France showed a strong interest in Morocco as
early as 1830. Following recognition by the
United Kingdom in 1904 of France's "sphere of
influence" in Morocco, the Algeciras Conference
(1906) formalized France's "special position"
and entrusted policing of Morocco to France and
Spain jointly. The Treaty of Fes (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.
Nationalist political parties, which took shape
under the French protectorate, began a strong
campaign for independence after World War II.
Declarations such as the Atlantic Charter (a
joint U.S.-British statement set forth, among
other things, the right of all people to choose
the form of government under which they live),
served as a base for the independence movement.
A manifesto of the Istiqlal (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 and remains a dominant
political force.
In 1953, France exiled the highly respected
Sultan Mohammed V and replaced him with the
unpopular Mohammed Ben Aarafa. Ben Aarafa's
reign was widely perceived as illegitimate, and
sparked active opposition to French rule. France
allowed Mohammed V to return in 1955, and by
1956, Morocco had regained its independence.
In the year 2006, Moroccans celebrated their
50th year of independence from France. After
gaining independence on March 2, 1956, Morocco
regained control over certain Spanish-ruled
areas through agreements with Spain in 1956 and
1958. The internationalized city of Tangier was
reintegrated with the signing of the Tangier
Protocol on October 29, 1956. The Spanish
enclave of Ifni in the south became part of
Morocco in 1969. Spain, however, retains control
over the small coastal enclaves of Ceuta and
Melilla in the north.
During the 1990s, King Hassan made great strides
toward economic and political liberalization.
King Hassan died on July 23, 1999, and was
succeeded by his son, Mohammed VI, who pledged
to continue these reforms. Under Mohammed VI,
the Moroccan Government has undertaken a number
of economic, political, and social reforms,
including the 2003 Moudawana, a reform of the
family status code, and the 2006 Equity and
Reconciliation Commission, which investigated
allegations of human rights abuse from 1956 to
1999.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
Morocco is divided into 16 administrative
regions (further broken into provinces and
prefectures); the regions are administered by
Walis (governors) appointed by the King.
The Moroccan Constitution provides for a
monarchy with a Parliament and an independent
judiciary. Ultimate authority rests with the
King. The King presides over the Council of
Ministers; appoints the prime minister following
legislative elections; appoints all members of
the government taking into account the prime
minister's recommendations; and may, at his
discretion, terminate the tenure of any
minister, dissolve the Parliament, call for new
elections, or rule by decree. The King is the
Commander in Chief of the military and holds the
title of Amir al-Mou'minin, the country's
religious leader.
Since the constitutional reform of 1996, the
bicameral legislature consists of a lower
chamber called the Chamber of Representatives,
which is directly elected, and an upper chamber,
the Chamber of Counselors, whose members are
indirectly elected through various regional,
local, and professional councils. The councils'
members themselves are directly elected.
Parliament's powers, though limited, were
expanded under the 1992 and 1996 constitutional
revisions to include budgetary matters, approval
authority, and establishment of commissions of
inquiry to investigate the government's actions.
The lower chamber of Parliament may dissolve the
government through a vote of no confidence.
Parliamentary elections were held in November
2002 and were considered largely free, fair, and
transparent. At that time, King Mohammed VI
formed a government appointing then-Interior
Minister Driss Jettou as Prime Minister. Cabinet
level positions were drawn from most major
parties in the coalition.
Following the 2002 elections, King Mohammed VI
highlighted several goals toward which the new
government should work: expanded employment
opportunities, economic development, meaningful
education, and increased housing availability.
To meet the King's objectives, the Jettou
government embarked on a series of initiatives
and reforms, which Jettou laid out in his early
days as Prime Minister.
Jettou emphasized that modernization and
revitalization of the country's infrastructure
(roads, trains, communications, water, etc.) and
national economy (support for Moroccan
businesses, preparations for competition,
modernization of modes of production, etc.),
were necessary to further development progress
in Morocco.
In order to create employment opportunities, the
government is promoting investment in the
tourism, industrial, fishing, and service
industries, and is ameliorating, restructuring,
and modernizing the education system.
Parliamentary elections were held in September
2007. Abbas El Fassi was designated to form a
new government.
Principal Government Officials
Head of State--King Mohammed VI
Prime Minister--Driss Jettou
Morocco maintains an embassy in the United
States at 1601 - 21st Street NW, Washington, DC
20009 (tel. 202-462-7979).
ECONOMY
Macroeconomic stability, coupled with low
inflation and relatively slow economic growth,
has characterized the Moroccan economy over the
past several years. The government continues to
pursue reform, liberalization, and modernization
aimed at stimulating growth and creating jobs.
Employment, however, remains overly dependent on
the agriculture sector, which is extremely
vulnerable to inconsistent rainfall. Morocco's
primary economic challenge is to accelerate
growth in order to reduce high levels of
unemployment and underemployment. While overall
unemployment stands at 7.7%, this figure masks
significantly higher urban unemployment, as high
as 33% among urban youths.
Through a foreign exchange rate anchor and
well-managed monetary policy, Morocco has held
inflation rates to industrial country levels
over the past decade; inflation between 1999 and
2004 remained at 1.5% and fell to 1% in 2005.
Despite criticism among exporters that the
dirham has become badly overvalued, the country
maintains a current account surplus. Foreign
exchange reserves are strong, with over $16
billion in reserves, the equivalent of 11 months
of imports at the end of 2005. The combination
of strong foreign exchange reserves and active
external debt management gives Morocco ample
capacity to service its debt. Current external
debt stands at about $17.9 billion.
Economic growth has been hampered by an
over-reliance on the agriculture sector.
Agriculture production is extremely susceptible
to rainfall levels and ranges from 15% to 20% of
GDP. Given that almost 40% of Morocco's
population depends directly on agriculture,
droughts have a severe negative effect on the
economy.
The current government is continuing a series of
structural reforms begun in recent years. The
most promising reforms have been in the labor
market and financial sectors, and privatization
has accelerated the sale of Global System for
Mobile Communications (GSM) licenses in recent
years. Morocco also has liberalized rules for
oil and gas exploration and has granted
concessions for many public services in major
cities. The tender process in Morocco is
becoming increasingly transparent. Many believe,
however, that the process of economic reform
must be accelerated in order to reduce urban
unemployment.
In January 2006, the bilateral Free Trade
Agreement (FTA) between the United States and
Morocco went into effect. The FTA represents an
important step towards President Bush's vision
of a Middle East Free Trade Area and is the
first in Africa. The U.S.-Morocco FTA eliminated
tariffs on 95% of bilateral trade in consumer
and industrial products with all remaining
tariffs to be eliminated within nine years. The
negotiations produced a comprehensive agreement
covering not only market access but also
intellectual property rights protection,
transparency in government procurement,
investments, services, and e-commerce. The FTA
provides new trade and investment opportunities
for both countries and will encourage economic
reforms and liberalization already underway.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
Morocco is a moderate Arab state which maintains
close relations with Europe and the United
States. It is a member of the UN and belongs to
the Arab League, Arab Maghreb Union (UMA),
Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC),
and the Non-Aligned Movement. King Mohammed VI
is the chairman of the OIC's Al-Quds Jerusalem
Committee. Although not a member of the African
Union (formerly the Organization of African
Unity--OAU), Morocco remains involved in African
diplomacy. It contributes consistently to UN
peacekeeping efforts on the continent.
Morocco is active in Maghreb, Arab, and African
affairs. It 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 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. Morocco
maintains close relations with Saudi Arabia and
the Persian Gulf states, which have provided
Morocco with substantial amounts of financial
assistance. Morocco has supported efforts to
stabilize Iraq following the downfall of Saddam
Hussein.
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 40
people and wounding over 100. More than a
million people subsequently demonstrated to
condemn the attacks. In April 2007, a series of
suicide bomb attacks occurred in central
Casablanca, one taking place near the U.S.
consulate general and one near the American
Language Center. The bombings demonstrated
Morocco's vulnerability to extremists who
capitalize on widespread poverty and social
exclusion.
The major issue in Morocco's foreign relations
is its claim to Western Sahara. 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.
Western Sahara
For more than 30 years, Morocco and the
independence-seeking Popular Front of the
Liberation of Saguia al Hamra and Rio de Oro (Polisario
Front) have vied for control of the Western
Sahara, a former Spanish territory. 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.
From 1904 until 1975, Spain occupied the entire
territory, which is divided into a northern
portion, the Saguia el Hamra, and a southern
two-thirds, known as Rio de Oro. In 1969, the
Polisario Front was formed to combat the
occupation of the territory. In November 1975,
King Hassan mobilized 350,000 unarmed Moroccan
citizens in what came to be known as the "Green
March" into Western Sahara. The march was
designed to both demonstrate and strengthen
Moroccan claims to the territory. On November
14, Spain, Morocco, and Mauritania announced a
tripartite agreement for an interim
administration under which Spain agreed to share
administrative authority with Morocco and
Mauritania, leaving aside the question of
sovereignty. With the establishment of a
Moroccan and Mauritanian presence throughout the
territory, however, Spain's role in the
administration of the Western Sahara ceased.
After a period of hostilities, Mauritania
withdrew from the territory in 1979 and signed a
peace treaty with the Polisario, relinquishing
all claims to the territory. Moroccan troops
occupied the region vacated by Mauritania and
later proclaimed the territory reintegrated into
Morocco. Morocco subsequently built a fortified
berm around three-fourths of Western Sahara and
has de facto administrative control over 80% of
the territory.
At the OAU (now African Union) summit in June
1981, King Hassan announced his willingness to
hold a referendum in the Western Sahara.
Subsequent meetings of an OAU Implementation
Committee proposed a cease-fire, a UN
peacekeeping force, and an interim
administration to assist with an
OAU-UN-supervised referendum on the issue of
independence or annexation. In 1984, the OAU
seated a delegation of the Sahara Democratic
Arab Republic (SDAR), the shadow government of
the Polisario. Morocco subsequently withdrew
from the OAU.
In 1988, Moroccan and Polisario representatives
agreed on a joint UN/OAU settlement proposal for
a referendum, but due to disagreements it never
took place. In 1991, the UN brokered a
cease-fire and settlement plan, and established
the United Nations Mission for Referendum in
Western Sahara (known by its French acronym,
MINURSO), which deployed a roughly 200-person
monitoring force to the territory.
The UN continues to explore with the parties
ways of arriving at a mutually agreed political
settlement and to promote confidence-building
measures between the parties in the interim. In
2003, former Secretary of State James Baker,
working as UN Secretary General Kofi Annan's
Personal Envoy, put forward a peace plan calling
for a referendum on issues of autonomy or
integration with Morocco. While the Polisario
Front and the Algerian Government accepted the
plan, Morocco rejected it. After a seven-year
effort to assist the parties in coming to an
agreement, James Baker resigned as Personal
Envoy in June 2004. In August of the same year,
Kofi Annan appointed Alvaro de Soto Special
Representative for the Western Sahara, to
continue Baker's work. Special Representative de
Soto left MINURSO in May 2005, and was replaced
in July 2005 by Peter van Walsum of the
Netherlands.
The Western Sahara dispute remains the primary
impediment to regional integration and
development goals. The parties were able to set
aside some of their differences when, in August
2004, U.S. Senator Richard Lugar led a mission
to the region that resulted in the release of
404 Moroccan prisoners of war who had long been
held by the Polisario. Today, approximately
90,000 Sahrawi refugees live in camps around
Tindouf, Algeria. The exact number of refugees
living in these camps is not known since there
has never been a reliable census of the
population. Several thousand Sahrawis also live
in the Moroccan-controlled area of Western
Sahara among a large number of Moroccan
settlers. Morocco considers the Western Sahara
part of its national territory, while Polisario
insists on the right of the people of the
Western Sahara to self-determination. Algeria
supports self-determination of the Sahrawis. The
issue remains a major stumbling block to
Moroccan-Algerian relations and regional
integration.
The United States has consistently encouraged
the parties to work with the United Nations, and
with each other, in a spirit of flexibility and
compromise, to find a mutually acceptable
settlement. In this regard, the U.S. has
welcomed Morocco's recent introduction of an
autonomy initiative, is encouraged that it has
spurred discussion, and believes that it has
created an opportunity for Morocco and the
Polisario to come to an agreement on this
long-simmering problem. The United Nations
Security Council resolution, which provides
MINURSO its mandate, has been renewed for
six-month intervals since its inception and is
expected to be approved for a subsequent
extension in October 2007. The U.S. has raised
with the UN our support for direct negotiations
without preconditions, as called for in the
resolution, and in June and August 2007 the
Moroccans and the Polisario, with Algeria and
Mauritania participating as interested neighbor
states, met for two rounds of talks in
Manhasset, New York, mediated by Peter van
Walsum. A third round of negotiations is
tentatively planned for November 2007 in
Switzerland.
U.S.-MOROCCAN RELATIONS
Morocco was the first country to seek diplomatic
relations with the Government of the United
States in 1777, and remains one of our oldest
and closest allies in the region. Formal U.S.
relations with Morocco date from 1787, when the
two nations negotiated a Treaty of Peace and
Friendship. Renegotiated in 1836, the treaty is
still in force, constituting the longest
unbroken treaty relationship in U.S. history. As
testament to the special nature of the
U.S.-Moroccan relationship, Tangier is home to
the oldest U.S. diplomatic property in the
world, and the only building on foreign soil
that is listed in the U.S. National Register of
Historic Places, the American Legation in
Tangier (now a museum).
U.S.-Moroccan relations, characterized by mutual
respect and friendship, have remained strong
through cooperation and sustained high-level
dialogue. King Hassan II visited the United
States several times during his reign as King,
meeting with Presidents Kennedy, Johnson,
Carter, Reagan, Bush, and Clinton. King Mohammed
VI has continued his father's tradition; he made
his first trip to the U.S. as King on June 20,
2000. Prime Minister Jettou visited Washington
in January 2004, and King Mohammed came to the
United States in July 2004. Then-Secretary of
State Colin Powell traveled to Morocco in
December 2004 to co-chair with Foreign Minister
Benaissa the first meeting of the G8-BMENA
"Forum for the Future." In August 2007, Under
Secretary for Public Diplomacy and Public
Affairs Karen Hughes visited Morocco to meet
with Moroccan officials, Moroccan
non-governmental organizations, and students.
As a stable, democratizing, and liberalizing
Arab Muslim nation, Morocco is important for
U.S. interests in the Middle East. Accordingly,
U.S. policy toward Morocco seeks sustained and
strong engagement, and identifies priorities for
reform, conflict resolution, counterterrorism
cooperation, and public outreach.
The U.S. Agency for International Development
(USAID) and its predecessor agencies have
managed an active and effective assistance
program in Morocco since 1953, for a cumulative
amount exceeding $2 billion. The amount of USAID
assistance to Morocco in FY 2006 was $19.2
million, with an estimated $18.9 million
allotted for FY 2007. USAID's current
multi-sectoral strategy (2004-2008) consists of
three strategic objectives in creating more
opportunities for trade and investment, basic
education and workforce training, and government
responsiveness to citizen needs.
The Peace Corps has been active in Morocco for
more than 40 years, with the first group of 53
volunteers arriving in the country in 1963.
Since that time, nearly 4,000 volunteers have
served in Morocco, and have served in a variety
of capacities including lab technology, urban
development, commercial development, education,
rural water supply, small business development,
beekeeping, and English training. In 2007, 197
volunteers served in Morocco, working in four
sectors: health, youth development, small
business, and the environment.
Principal U.S. Embassy Officials
Ambassador--Thomas
T. Riley
Deputy Chief of Mission--Robert Jackson
Director, USAID Mission--Monica Stein-Olson
Political Counselor--Craig Karp
Economic Counselor--Stuart Smith
Agricultural Affairs Officer--Michael Fay
Foreign Commercial Officer--Rick Ortiz
Public Affairs Officer--Evelyn Early
Consul General, Casablanca--Douglas Greene
The U.S.
Embassy in
Morocco is located at 2 Avenue de Marrakech,
Rabat tel. 212 (37) 76-22-65.