Morocco: Adapting to new world paradigms

By on March 30, 2010
Reforms cannot be measured by their quantitative importance, or the length of time passing. They are assessed by their meaning, their essences, their results, and for their quality and purpose.
The Moroccan Sahara autonomy should be considered as victory, the culmination of a policy in its noble and positive acceptance. It is a coherent strategy, tailored to the requirements of the era and the demands of modernity.
This contemporary policy gave a new image of the country mobilizing the citizens internally and allowing Morocco to earn a special status among democratic countries, giving diplomacy a new impetus.

If Morocco’s image is positively perceived abroad, particularly in democratic countries, this is due to the political, economic and social reforms. Among these reforms, you have the challenges of regional autonomy within the framework of national unity. It is a prospective approach of a new regional structure, which tends to simultaneously integrate the ethnic dimensions, socio-economic, cultural, demographic, spatial and historical ones all together; while taking into account the requirements of political decentralisation expanded in harmony with the imperatives of national unity and territorial integrity.
This proactive scenario is the product of the national genius, which corresponds to the Moroccan personality and its collective ambitions. It is a commitment to building the modern nation state, democratic and decentralised, serving the strategic interests and national believers in the virtues of a Maghreb integration and association with the European Union within the Euro-Mediterranean cooperation.
As Morocco is opening on current issues such as globalisation, and adapting, with a firm “foot-print”, to the new world that has changed paradigms.

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