AFRICA

Morocco: Hundreds In Casablanca Protest High Cost Of living

As Morocco faces soaring prices, particularly for food products, which are affecting the most modest households, scores of the citizens went out to the streets to protest against the rapid rise.

Several hundred militants from Morocco’s left-wing trade union movement denounced the “high cost of living” and “government inaction” in Casablanca, western Morocco, on Sunday, despite a ban on demonstrations, AFP journalists observed on site.

Coming from all over the country, trade unionists from the left-wing Confédération Démocratique du Travail (CDT) gathered in the historic center of the economic capital.

“We’re here to voice our discontent at soaring prices and attacks on purchasing power”, explained Abdellah Lagbouri, a CDT member who travelled from Agadir (south) to Casablanca, to AFP.

“It’s a disgrace, workers’ livelihoods are in danger”, protested the demonstrators, almost all dressed in yellow chasubles, armbands and caps, the union’s color.

“How can the poorest people live” with soaring food prices, they shouted.

A member of the CDT National Council, Tarik Alaoui El Housseini, told AFP that the CDT initially, wanted to organize a national march in Casablanca, but the parade was banned by local authorities.

“We stuck to a sit-in,” he explained.

The rally took place without major incident, with only a few jostles with the police, according to AFP journalists on the scene.

Inflation slowed slightly in April, to 7.8% year-on-year, after 10.1% in February and 8.2% in March, according to official statistics.

But the rise in food prices remains very high (+16.3% year-on-year).

This inflation can be explained in part by the chronic rainfall deficit which is affecting the agricultural sector, the mainstay of the Moroccan economy, and in particular causing fruit and vegetable prices to soar.

The CDT denounces “the government’s inaction in implementing the social agreement signed last year”, Nadia Soubat, a member of the union’s executive board, told AFP.

In April 2022, the executive signed a “social agreement” with the main trade unions and employers, which included as its key measure an increase in the minimum wage in both the private and public sectors.

“The government has honored a large part of its commitments, despite the difficult economic climate”, said government spokesman Mustapha Baïtas recently.

Chioma Kalu

Follow us on:

Chioma Kalu

Recent Posts

NDLEA Arrests 34 Suspects, Recovers Illicit Substances in Kano

NDLEA operatives in Kano have arrested 34 suspects, seized illicit substances, and dislodged drug joints…

1 hour ago

Mozambique Faces Security Crisis After 1,500 Inmates Flee High-Security Prison

Over 1,500 inmates escaped from Mozambique's high-security Machava prison, sparking deadly clashes and raising security…

2 hours ago

Undersea Power Cable Between Finland and Estonia Suffers Outage, Investigation Launched

Finnish and Estonian authorities investigate an outage in the undersea Estlink-2 power cable.

2 hours ago

Biden and Trump Deliver Contrasting Christmas Messages

US President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump have shared distinctly different messages to…

2 hours ago

Body Discovered in Wheel Well After United Flight Lands in Hawaii

A dead body was discovered in the wheel well of a United Airlines jet after…

2 hours ago

Syria Reports 14 Security Personnel Killed in Ambush by Assad Loyalists

Syrian authorities have confirmed 14 security personnel were killed in an ambush allegedly carried out…

3 hours ago