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The Moroccan youth collective GenZ 212 is concerned about the "suspicious attempts to sow division and stoke identity tensions" among Moroccans. These concerns were expressed after members of the Amazigh Movement announced the suspension of their involvement in the initiative.
Young members of the Amazigh Movement in the regions of Souss-Massa, Marrakech-Safi, Casablanca-Settat, Drâa-Tafilalet and Guelmim-Es-Smara have dissociated themselves from GenZ 212. In a statement, they accuse the movement, which aims to bring together Generation Z youth around demands for the quality of public services in education and health, as well as the fight against corruption, of having strayed from its guiding principles and democratic approach. They say they reject "the instrumentalization of the legitimate struggle of youth in the service of ideological positions or specific political agendas."
These young people have protested against the remarks made by journalist Aboubakr Jamaï, who was invited to a debate on the Discord platform and followed by "tens of thousands of young people." Remarks that they consider "hostile to the Amazigh as the ancestral identity, language and culture of the Moroccan people" enshrined in the 2011 Constitution. "The repeated statements of many guests denying the struggle of the Amazigh Movement as a popular, democratic and liberating dynamic" are also not to their liking. Based on these observations, they have decided to "suspend all activities within GenZ 212, until it resumes its mobilization to achieve the overall objectives that the young people of the Amazigh Movement have defended: the reform of the health and education systems and the fight against corruption."
Following this statement, GenZ212 issued a communiqué to reaffirm its principles of "consciousness, unity and dignity." The movement expressed "a deep pride in the new spirit that reflects the consciousness of the rising generation of Morocco," describing it as a conviction that "true reform begins with the people and for the people." For it, the current moment is a turning point: Morocco is now "on the threshold of a new phase of progress" driven by the awareness of young people and unity around social justice and comprehensive reform. However, GenZ 212 is concerned about the "suspicious attempts to sow division and stoke identity tensions" among Moroccans. Such rhetoric seeks to fragment a country "linked for centuries by a common struggle and destiny," warns the movement.
Invoking Morocco’s long history of unity and resistance, GenZ212 recalled that "the flag raised against colonialism was not that of a group or a region, but that of a unified Morocco, a land, a people and a future." Finally, the movement is making a collective call to action. It urges Moroccans to reject divisive discourses and work together towards an inclusive and equitable future.
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