Morocco's Brotherhood challenging election results to cover up defeat
The Moroccan Justice and Development Party, the political arm of the Muslim Brotherhood, has appealed the results of the parliamentary elections, after losing the elections.
However, the
Moroccan judiciary turned down the appeals which were made by the party in a
number of Moroccan states.
This has
officially ended the heyday of the Brotherhood in the Moroccan cities they
controlled in the past.
The head of
the Administrative Court in Agadir City, along Morocco's Atlantic coast, received
an official appeal from the Justice and Development Party, in which it
challenged the results of the elections of Aziz Akhannouch who is now Morocco's
prime minister.
In filing those
appeals, the Brotherhood fails to pay attention to the reasons behind its
election defeat. The group is also failing to see rejection to it on the
streets of Morocco.
It works
hard to disrupt the formation of the new government which should address Morocco's
problems the prime ministers of the party, Abdelilah benKirane and Saad-Eddine El Othmani, failed in solving when the party was in power.
Meanwhile, the
electoral setback of the Justice and Development Party is the focus of a new
research paper by Moroccan researcher, Abdelilah Sati.
The paper
attributes the defeat of the party in the latest elections to a number of
reasons, including its internal weaknesses.
It said the
presence of rifts within the party, especially among its top leaders,
contributed to weakening the party.
The paper
especially cites a leadership conflict between El Othmani and Benkirane.
Titled, 'Punitive
voting closes the arc of Islamists in Morocco', the paper delves deep into the results
of the legislative elections which took place in Morocco on September 8.