Benkirane: From clandestine work to the top of Morocco's government
Abdelilah Benkirane was the prime minister of Morocco and the secretary-general of the Moroccan Justice and Development Party from July 2008 to March 2017.
He became a member
of the Moroccan House of Representatives for the northwestern city of Sale on
November 14, 1997. He was re-elected two times in 2002 and 2007.
Soon after becoming the Moroccan
prime minister, Benkirane became a leading member of the Justice
and Development Party. On November 26, 2017, Benkirane was re-elected as the
secretary-general of the party for the third time.
The Moroccan government which is headed
by Saadeddine
Othmani suffers a real crisis at present, amid growing public anger against the
policies of the government.
Moroccan King Mohammed VI met Benkirane on November 29, 2011 and appointed him as the
prime minister of Morocco. This came after his party won the parliamentary
elections during what came to be known as the Arab Spring Revolutions.
Benkirane
formed a second coalition government that won approval from the king on October
10, 2013.
It took Benkirane 143 days to form the
government, a process made tough by the withdrawal of some parties, especially Istiqlal
Party.
The
second government contained 39 ministers.
Upbringing
Benkirane
was born in al-Akari district in Moroccan capital Rabat. His father hailed from
a Sufi family that worked in trade. Some of the family members studied
jurisprudence.



