Morocco Urges Diaspora to Invest in Nation’s New Development Model

– byBladi.net · 2 min read
Morocco Urges Diaspora to Invest in Nation's New Development Model

To build the new ideal that Morocco has defined for itself, all the children of the Kingdom living in Europe are called upon to play their part. This call was made on Saturday evening in Antwerp by Mohamed Ameur, Morocco’s Ambassador to Belgium and the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg.

More than a simple call, it is an exhortation to the Moroccan community living abroad to contribute to the new development model that King Mohammed VI has called for.

The diplomat seized the opportunity offered by the appointment of Brahim Rizki as the new Consul General of the Kingdom in Antwerp, to recall that the Sovereign had insisted on the participatory and inclusive approach presiding over the development of this new development model which puts the Moroccan citizen, wherever he may be, at the center of this process, reports Libération, citing the MAP.

According to Mohamed Ameur, thanks to the dynamic of reforms, initiated in Morocco, under the enlightened leadership of the Sovereign, the Kingdom can be proud to be "an oasis of stability in a region marked by strong turbulence, an indispensable partner in the Euro-Mediterranean region and a development locomotive for the African continent".

Thus, while saluting the patriotism of the Moroccan community, the diplomat recalled the Sovereign’s concern for Moroccans living abroad, while calling on those in Belgium and all of Europe to rally behind Mohammed VI’s new vision, in order to inject dynamism and remarkable development into the Kingdom.

In turn, Brahim Rizki, the new Consul of Morocco in Antwerp, affirmed his availability to constantly serve the Moroccan community, in accordance with the Royal High Directives, in order to facilitate administrative procedures and organize outreach activities for their benefit.

Particular emphasis was placed on outreach activities for young people in the diaspora, on cultural activities, religious supervision, administrative facilities and summer camps in Morocco, the same source specifies, noting that hundreds of Moroccans from the diaspora attended this meeting.