Mohammed VI of Morocco
Mohammed VI is the King of Morocco. He is a member of the Alaouite dynasty and ascended to the throne on 23 July 1999 upon the death of his father, King Hassan II.
In 2019, his net worth was estimated around and he is the richest king in Africa in 2014 according to the American business magazine Forbes. and he is the 5th richest king in the world.
Early life and education
Mohammed VI was the second child and oldest son of Hassan II and his secondary wife, Lalla Latifa Hammou. On the day of his birth, Mohammed was appointed Heir Apparent and Crown Prince. His father was keen on giving him a religious and political education from an early age; at the age of four he started attending the Qur'anic school at the Royal Palace.Mohammed completed his first primary and secondary studies at Collège Royal and attained his Baccalaureate in 1981, before gaining a bachelor's degree in law at the Mohammed V University at Agdal in 1985. His research paper dealt with "the Arab-African Union and the Strategy of the Kingdom of Morocco in matters of International Relations". He has also frequented the Imperial College and University of Rabat. He was furthermore appointed President of the Pan Arab Games, and was commissioned a Colonel Major of the Royal Moroccan Army on 26 November 1985. He served as the Coordinator of the Offices and Services of the Royal Armed Forces until 1994.
In 1987, Mohammed obtained his first Certificat d'Études Supérieures in political sciences, and in July 1988 he obtained a Diplôme d'Études Approfondies in public law. In November 1988, he trained in Brussels with Jacques Delors, then-President of the European Commission.
Mohammed obtained his PhD in law with distinction on 29 October 1993 from the French University of Nice Sophia Antipolis for his thesis on "EEC-Maghreb Relations". On 12 July 1994, he was promoted to the military rank of Major General, and that same year he became President of the High Council of Culture and Commander-in-Chief of the Royal Moroccan Army.
He speaks Arabic, Berber, English, French and Spanish.
The New York Times reported that prior to ascending to the throne, Mohammed "gained a reputation as a playboy during the years he spent waiting in the wings, showing a fondness for fast cars and nightclubs."
King of Morocco
On 23 July 1999, Mohammed succeeded his father as king, being enthroned in Rabat on 30 July.Social reforms and liberalization
Shortly after he took the throne, Mohammed addressed his nation via television, promising to take on poverty and corruption, while creating jobs and improving Morocco's human rights record. Mohammed's reformist rhetoric was opposed by Islamist conservatives, and some of his reforms angered fundamentalists. In February 2004, he enacted a new family code, or Mudawana, which granted women more power.Mohammed also created the so-called Instance Equité et Réconciliation, which was tasked with researching human rights violations under Hassan II. This move was welcomed by many as promoting democracy, but was also criticized because reports of human rights violations could not name the perpetrators. According to human rights organisations, widespread abuses still exist in Morocco. The 2011 Moroccan protests were motivated by corruption and general political discontentment, as well as by the hardships of the global economic crisis.
In December 2010, the whistleblowing website WikiLeaks published diplomatic cables which alleged high-level corruption involving the king himself.
In a speech delivered on 9 March 2011, he said that parliament would receive "new powers that enable it to discharge its representative, legislative, and regulatory mission". In addition, the powers of the judiciary were granted greater independence from the King, who announced that he was impaneling a committee of legal scholars to produce a draft constitution by June 2011. On 1 July, voters approved a set of political reforms proposed by Mohammed.
The reforms consisted of the following:
- The Berber language is an official state language along with Arabic.
- The state preserves and protects the Hassānīya language and all the linguistic components of the Moroccan culture as a heritage of the nation.
- Mohammed now has the obligation to appoint the prime minister from the party that wins the most seats in the parliamentary elections, but it can be any member of the winning party and not necessarily the party's leader. Previously, the king could nominate anybody he wanted for this position regardless of the election results. That was usually the case when no party had a big advantage over the other parties, in terms of the number of seats in the parliament.
- The king is no longer "sacred or holy" but the "integrity of his person" is "inviolable".
- High administrative and diplomatic posts, are now appointed by the prime minister and the ministerial council which is presided by the king; previously the latter exclusively held this power.
- The prime minister is the head of government and president of the council of government, he has the power to dissolve the parliament.
- The prime minister will preside over the Council of Government, which prepares the general policy of the state. Previously the king held this position.
- The parliament has the power of granting amnesty. Previously this was exclusively held by the king.
- The judiciary system is independent from the legislative and executive branch, the king guarantees this independence.
- Women are guaranteed "civic and social" equality with men. Previously, only "political equality" was guaranteed, though the 1996 constitution grants all citizens equality in terms of rights before the law.
- The king retains complete control over the armed forces and the judiciary as well as matters pertaining to religion and foreign policy; the king also retains the authority to appoint and dismiss prime ministers.
- All citizens have the freedom of thought, ideas, artistic expression and creation. Previously only free speech and the freedom of circulation and association were guaranteed. However, criticizing or directly opposing the king is still punishable with prison.
20 February Movement
The legitimacy of the king was contested in 2011 with the 20 February Movement that attempted to undermine the functioning of the monarchic system.Royal pardon scandal
Protests broke out in Rabat, the capital of Morocco, on 2 August 2013, after Mohammed pardoned 48 jailed Spaniards, including a pedophile who had been serving a 30-year sentence for raping 11 children aged between 4 and 15. He has since revoked the pardon, after popular outrage.Business and wealth
Mohammed is Morocco's leading businessman and banker. In 2015, he was estimated by Forbes magazine to be worth US$2.5 billion, and the Moroccan Royal Family has one of the largest fortunes in the world. Along with his family, they hold the majority stakes in the Société Nationale d'Investissement, which was originally state-owned but was merged in 2013 with Omnium Nord Africain, to form a single holding company that was taken off the Casablanca Stock Exchange—resulting in the scrapping of an equivalent of 50 billion Dirhams Marketcap. SNI has a diverse portfolio consisting of many important businesses in Morocco and operating in various sectors such as; Attijariwafa Bank, Managem, Onapar, SOMED, Wafa Assurance, Marjane, Wana-Inwi, SONASID, Lafarge Maroc, Sopriam, Renault Maroc and Nareva. SNI also owns many food-processing companies and is currently in the process of disengaging from this sector. Between mid-2012 and 2013 SNI sold; Lessieur, Centrale Laitière, Bimo and Cosumar to foreign groups for a total amount of ~$1.37 billion.SNI and ONA both owned stakes in Brasseries du Maroc, the largest alcoholic beverages manufacturer and distributor of brands such as Heineken in the country.
Mohammed is also a leading agricultural producer and land owner in Morocco, where agriculture is exempted from taxes. His holding company "Siger" has shares in the large agricultural group "Les domaines agricoles", which was founded by Hassan II. In 2008, Telquel estimated that "Les domaines" had a revenue of $157 million, with 170,000 tons of citrus exported in that year. According to the same magazine, the company officially owns 12,000 hectares of agricultural lands. "Chergui", a manufacturer of dairy products, is the most recognizable brand of the group. Between 1994 and 2004, the group has been managed by Mohammed VI's brother-in-law Khalid Benharbit, the husband of Princess Lalla Hasna. "Les domaines" also owns the "Royal Golf de Marrakech", which originally belonged to Thami El Glaoui.
His palace's daily operating budget is reported by Forbes to be $960,000—which is paid by the Moroccan state as part of a 2.576 billion Dirhams/year budget as of 2014—owing much of it to the expense of personnel, clothes, and car repairs.
Allegations of corruption
Royal involvement in business is a major topic in Morocco but public discussion of it is sensitive. The US embassy in Rabat reported to Washington in a leaked cable that "corruption is prevalent at all levels of Moroccan society". Corruption allegedly reaches the highest levels in Morocco, where the business interests of Mohammed and some of his advisors influence "every large housing project," according to WikiLeaks documents quoted in The Guardian newspaper.The documents released by the whistleblower website also quote the case of a businessman working for a US consortium, whose plans in Morocco were paralysed for months after he refused to join forces with a company linked with the royal palace. Decisions on big investments in the kingdom were taken by only three people, the documents quote a company executive linked to the royal family as saying. The three are the king, his secretary Mounir Majidi, and the monarch's close friend, adviser and former classmate Fouad Ali Himma, the executive said at a meeting with potential investors in a Gulf country. This corruption especially affects the housing sector, the WikiLeaks documents show.
In April 2016, Mounir Majidi, the personal secretary of Mohammed, was named in the Panama Papers.
Family
Mohammed has one brother, Prince Moulay Rachid, and three sisters: Princess Lalla Meryem, Princess Lalla Asma, and Princess Lalla Hasna. The New York Times noted "conflicting reports about whether the new monarch had been married on Friday night, within hours of his father's death ... to heed a Moroccan tradition that a King be married before he ascends the throne." A palace official subsequently denied that a marriage had taken place.On 21 March 2002, Mohammed married Salma Bennani in Rabat. Bennani was granted the personal title of Princess with the title of Her Royal Highness on her marriage. They have two children: Crown Prince Moulay Hassan, who was born on 8 May 2003, and Princess Lalla Khadija, who was born on 28 February 2007.
Mohammed's birthday on 21 August is a public holiday, although festivities were cancelled upon the death of his aunt in 2014.
Children
Titles, styles and honours
Titles and styles
The official style of Mohammed is "His Majesty the King Mohammed the Sixth, Commander of the Faithful, may God grant him victory". When he is executing his duty as head of the Royal Moroccan Armed Forces, he is generally referred to as the "Commander-in-Chief."Honours and decorations
National orders:- Grand Master of the Order of Muhammad,
- Grand Master of the Order of the Throne,
- Grand Master of the Order of Ouissam Alaouite,
- Grand Master of the Order of the Independence Combat,
- Grand Master of the Order of Fidelity,
- Grand Master of the Order of Military Merit,
Foreign orders:
- Grand Officer of the Order of the Equatorial Star of Gabon
- Collar of the Order of Civil Merit of Spain
- Honorary Knight of the Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
- Grand Cross of the Order of Charles III of Spain
- Grand Cordon of the Order of the Republic of Tunisia
- Knights Companion of the Order of the Garter of United Kingdom
- Grand Cross of the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic of Italy
- Grand Cross of the Order of Aviz of Portugal
- Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour of France
- Collar of the Order of al-Hussein bin Ali of Jordan
- Collar of the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic of Italy
- Grand Cordon of the National Order of Merit of Mauritania
- Grand Collar of the Order of the Seventh of November of Tunisia
- Grand Cordon of the National Order of Mali of Mali with Collar
- Collar of the Order of Isabella the Catholic of Spain
- Wissam of the Order of the Umayyads of Syria
- Wissam of the Order of Merit of Lebanon Special Class
- First Class Medal of the Order of Abu Bakar Siddiq of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement
- Grand Collar of the Order of al-Khalifa of Bahrain
- Silver Star of United States
- Collar of the Order of Mubarak the Great of Kuwait
- Cordon of the Order of the Independence of Qatar
- Grand Cordon of the Order of the Nile of Egypt
- Grand Cross of the Order of Pakistan First Class of Pakistan
- Grand Cross of the Order of Valour of Cameroon
- Grand Cross of the Order of the Equatorial Star of Gabon
- Grand Cross of the National Order of the Niger of the Niger
- Grand Cordon of the Order of Leopold of Belgium
- Collar of the Order of the Southern Cross of Brazil
- Medal of Honour of the Congress of Peru
- Collar of the Order of Bernardo O'Higgins of Chile
- Grand Collar of the Order of the Liberator General San Martin of Argentina
- Collar of the Order of Charles III of Spain
- Grand Collar of the Order of the Aztec Eagle of Mexico
- Grand Cross of the Order of Burkinabé of Burkina Faso
- Supreme Collar of the Order of the Chrysanthemum of Japan
- Grand Commander of the Order of the Republic of the Gambia
- Grand Cross of the Order of Merit of the Congo of the Republic of Congo
- Grand Cross of the Order of the National Hero of the Democratic Republic of the Congo of Congo-Kinshasa
- Commander Grand Cross with Chain of the Order of the Three Stars of Latvia
- Collar of the Order of Abdulaziz Al Saud of Saudi Arabia
- Grand Collar of the Order of Independence of Equatorial Guinea
- Collar of the Order of the Republic of Tunisia
- Grand Cross of the National Order of the Ivory Coast
- Collar of the Order of Zayed
- Grand Cross of the National Order of Madagascar
- Grand Collar of the Military Order of Saint James of the Sword of Portugal
- Companion of the Order of the Star of Ghana
- Grand Cross of the Order of La Pléiade