Saturday, May 21, 2011

The protests in Morocco Mohamed VI aodos arrive

Mohamed VI, the monarch Alawi heard yesterday for the first time, directly, claims that since late February wielding youth in the streets of Morocco. Dozens, perhaps hundreds of unemployed graduates required to work with the sovereign screams getting very nervous about the security service, forcing to alter the protocol and interrupting the broadcast of the ceremony on television.

The monarch attended Friday prayers at the mosque Assoun in the center of Rabat, and as usual the output is expecting a crowd that was enthusiastic live the king. Scores of unemployed graduates, one of the most active in the protests, managed to sneak into the first rows of the crowd thronged behind a fence, according to several news sites Moroccans.

When Mohammed VI left the church youth coated with yellow vests that single out the unemployed and who had been hiding. They began chanting: "The people want to work!", "Majesty, we are in trouble", and sing the national anthem. At no time rebuked the king. Bemused, others concentrated on the door of the mosque fell silent and did not live to their traditional sovereign.

The slogans chanted by the unemployed twitched the security service, along with the protocol, they decided that the king should leave the place immediately without shaking hands, as usual, some of his subjects there assembled. Public television, which was broadcast live Friday prayers and the first steps taken by Mohamed VI to leave the broadcast interrupted Assoun claiming technical problems.

The police did not engage in any arrests, but, in the afternoon, when the unemployed graduates are again concentrated in the capital, as they have done for years, they were suppressed. "It gave us more clubs than usual," said Ahmed, an unemployed young actor who participated in the protest at the mosque.

"It's as if he had wanted revenge for what happened at noon," he concludes. Various independent estimates indicate that one third of graduates are unemployed in Morocco and many take jobs, often in the informal sector, which do not correspond to their training.

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