Morocco’s capital Rabat gleams with new roads, restored buildings, buzzing cafes and its immaculate Andalusian Gardens. Yet across the river, the gloss quickly comes off King Mohammed VI’s showpiece city.
The adjacent commuter town of Sale is full of rutted roads, dilapidated housing and crime. A hotbed for activists over the years, it erupted again last week as young protesters in the densely populated neighborhood of Al-Amal smashed police cars, vandalized banks and set properties ablaze. They were met with a brutal crackdown by the authorities.
Their anger stems from widening inequalities in a country that’s spending billions on hosting the World Cup and such things as Africa’s biggest ice hockey rink, and where the ruling class lives lavishly but youth unemployment sits at 60%. And it’s a resentment that’s echoing across the globe at the moment.
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