Police say two shot dead in ‘self-defence’

In the state media, at least two people were killed in Morocco after opening a fire to prevent protesters from throwing a police station in LQLIAA near the coastal city.
The first deaths reported that the government’s decision to build football stadiums for the 2030 FIFA World Cup instead of improving public services and fighting against the economic crisis.
“The stadiums are here, but where are the hospitals?” It is a popular cheering among the gene protesters.
A demonstrator told BBC Newsday that Oujda in the Algerian border was like a “prison” of the hospital.
He was dirty and said that patients had to bribe to security guards and nurses to see a doctor, speaking the protester who spoke on the condition of anonymity with fear of retaliation.
Protests are taking place at night and the police reported that the state’s news agency reported that the police were forced to open fire on Wednesday evening to repel the “attack” in LQLIAA.
In the early hours of Wednesday, the Ministry of Interior said that people will be approved by people’s right to protest in laws.
Organizers of the protest movement, known as Genz 212, the number that referred to the Morocco’s international search code – removed themselves from violence. They are mainly gathered through social media and do not have an official leadership structure.
Official statistics show that Morocco’s unemployment rate is 12.8%, and that the young unemployment increased to 35.8% and 19% among graduates.
Protests are also the point of destination for tourists who went to Morocco by Ferry from Spain to Ferry from Spain.
According to the local media, Marrakesh, the tourist center of Morocco, hit violence and the protesters burned a police station.
Interior Ministry spokesman Rachid El Khalfi, after unrest, 409 people were detained in Morocco, he said.
More than 260 police officers and 20 protesters were injured, 40 police vehicles and 20 private cars were burned.
The uprising follows large -scale demonstrations in Nepal, Indonesia, Philippines and Madagascar, such as Youth.
While the uprising in Nepal led the Prime Minister to resign, Madagascar’s president terminated his government on Monday to appease the protesters there.
Morocco’s management coalition made a statement on Tuesday, which expresses the desire to establish a dialogue with young people in institutions and public spaces to find realistic solutions.
He also praised the “balanced reaction of security officials in line with the legal procedures of the relevant legal procedures.




