Residents died attempting to extract coal from long abandoned mines to make money. Now protesters are demanding an economic alternative..
Ramshackle streets, rudimentary unfinished houses, and unemployed youth killing time in the cafes, dreaming of better futures with a cigarette between their lips. Jerada is everything you would expect of the impoverished Moroccan towns of the Middle Atlas, the arid south, and the nearby Rif.
The only difference is the presence of an impressive array of local and national police on every street corner in town.
โItโs like being in Iraq!โ Larbi said, with his booming voice and threadbare jean jacket, a red cap fitted snugly to his head.
The inhabitants of the poverty-stricken town in the northeastern corner of the kingdom, a mere stoneโs throw from the Algerian border, agree and denounce what they see as deliberate militarisation to intimidate them.
But the massive security presence did not stop them from heading to the streets once again by the thousands on 16 March to criticiseย the governmentโs neglect of their city.
Called “Silicosis Valley” because of the large number of residents affected by the lung disease, Jerada has been rocked by demonstrations since the deaths last December of two miners trapped in the shaft of an abandoned coal mine. In the weeks that followed, two more died under similar circumstances.
The Morocco Coal Mine, formerly the economic lifeblood of the city, closed some 20 years ago, leaving the residents of Jerada jobless – and with the governmentโs promise of an action plan that never came.
So miners continue to risk their lives in the unsafe, deserted โdeath minesโ to extract coal by hand. For a handful of dirhams, the coal is sold to local notables, the so-called โcoal baronsโ who are mostly elected officials.
‘Firm action’
In February, Moroccan Prime Minister Saadeddine El Othmani visited the region, calling for โopen discussionsโ and announcing a series of development measures for the area.
But after his trip, government authorities opted for time-tested methods to crack down on protestors when they took to the streets, demanding a better plan.
Last week, Moroccan authorities banned all โillegal demonstrations,โ stating that they would โtake firm action against any irresponsible behaviour,โ before proceeding to arrest those leading the protests.
On Wednesday, as violent clashes broke out between police forces and protestors, the growing sense of anger among residents was palpable.
โThey did everything they could to provoke us, to trip us up in order to demonise usโ
– Larbi, a resident of Jerada
Interior Minister Abdelouafi Laftit defended the governmentโs actions, reporting that security forces sent to disperse an unauthorised sit-in had been injured, some seriously.
โGovernment forces will enforce the measures put into place to maintain public safety and order,โ he was quoted as saying.
But no mention was made of the injured protestors. โThey did everything they could to provoke us, to trip us up in order to demonise us,โ said Larbi despondently, shortly before a march planned that afternoon despite the ban.
The unemployed 40-year-old blamed nationalย news channels which he called “propaganda-spouting media” and said only tell one side of the story.
“They only reported on the wounded policemen and said nothing about the wounded protestors,” he said.
The demonstration started from one of the cityโs working-class neighbourhoods, the city centre being entirely cordoned off by the police. The protest march quickly gained momentum, gathering at least 10,000 protesters โ men, women, children โ all walking, despite the steady rainfall, toward Jeradaโs central square where local government buildings are located.
They demanded an โeconomic alternativeโ to the โdeath minesโ and an end to their marginalisation and also called for the release of the recently arrested activists as riot police looked on.
As if to cast-off any separatist or revolutionary inclination, the protesters brandishedย the red and green flag of Morocco, and even some portraits of King Mohammed VI.
No pity regarding the political elite
Protestors have little patience for the country’s political elite, especially the prime minister,ย who they said made empty promises which he isnโt strong enough to keep.
โI saw the city. I saw the mines. Itโs like the 19th century,โ Omar Balafrej, an MP from Rabat with the Federation of the Democratic Left (FDL), told AFP during the Jerada protest which he attended.
โThere are as many police as there are residents, and the demonstrations are peaceful.โ
We are peaceful individuals who just want enough to eat
– Hassan, Jerada resident
The demonstration ended after three hours without any incidents. The protestors walked for miles, but failed to reach the central square after they were turned away by the police.
“We are peaceful individuals who just want enough to eat,” said Hassan, a street peddler selling cigarettes.
At the end of the demonstration, the leaders of Moroccoโs latestย Hirakย – the name borrowed from the “Hirak Rif” protests held after the 2016 death of fishmongerย Mohsinย Fikri – said they will continue to protest until their demands are met.
Those demands include an economic alternative to the illegal mines, lower water and electricity bills, and the prosecution of the โcoal baronsโ who they say exploit their misery.
In the meantime, after the first round of arrests and the violence that tainted the dissent movement last week, some fear that what happened in Rif during the protests that followed Fikri’s death may also happen in Jerada.
With the wave of unprecedented social movements from Al Hoceima in the Rif to Zagora in the south, the kingdomโs authorities have stepped up arrests of protesters in recent months, much to the dismay of human rights advocates.