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Moroccan Prime Minister Abdelilah Benkirane. Photo: AFP

Islamists on track to defeat liberals in Moroccan elections, according to preliminary results

Interior Minister Mohamed Hassad said the election was “transparent” and had gone well, rejecting accusations of voter fraud from both sides

The Islamist party which has headed Morocco’s coalition government since Arab-spring inspired protests five years ago has defeated liberal rivals in parliamentary elections, according to official partial results.

The Islamist Justice and Development Party (PJD) took 99 seats while the Authenticity and Modernity Party (PAM) – which had campaigned against the “Islamisation” of Moroccan society – took 80 with 90 per cent of the vote counted, the Interior Ministry said.

Interior Minister Mohamed Hassad said the election was “transparent” and had gone well, rejecting accusations of voter fraud from both sides.

The PJD earlier issued a statement saying it was “very concerned about numerous reports of fraud being carried out by authorities” in favour of the PAM, and called on the interior ministry to “urgently intervene”.

I came to carry out my duty as a citizen. Our Morocco needs a healthy democracy
Meriem, voter

PAM spokesman Khalid Adennoun declined to comment but said that his party had filed “50 complaints” of voting irregularities, some concerning the PJD in Tangiers.

An Islamist candidate was attacked and wounded outside a polling station in Rabat, according to local media. A video shared on social networks also showed a man stuffing a ballot box, leading the PJD to file a complaint, media reported.

Participation was at 43 per cent, or roughly 6,750,000 voters, Hassad said during a press conference in the capital Rabat. Early turnout had been low in Rabat with many people waiting till after the weekly noon prayers to cast their ballots while others trickled to the polls after office hours.

Meriem, a voter in her 40s, said after casting her ballot in central Rabat: “I came to carry out my duty as a citizen. Our Morocco needs a healthy democracy.”

To make life easier for the illiterate, who make up a third of Morocco’s population, the 30 parties in contention were marked on ballot papers with symbols such as a tractor or camel.

The PJD had been tipped to lead polls, but analyst Abdellah Tourabi said: “No one, really no one, can say or predict ... who will win.”

Full results will be announced on Saturday but the Islamist party already has a comfortable lead and seems highly likely to head up the next government. But real power will remain in the hands of King Mohammed VI, the scion of a monarchy that has ruled the North African country for 350 years.

The PJD came to power in 2011, months after massive street protests prompted concessions from the monarchy.

A new constitution transferred some of the king’s powers to parliament, at a time when autocratic regimes were falling in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya.

While in government, the PJD passed a controversial reform of the retirement system and followed a relatively liberal economic policy. Its task has been complicated by the unstable world economy and a drought this year that hit Morocco’s vital agricultural sector and sent growth plummeting.

The party has been weakened by rising unemployment and what critics say is a failure to make good on promises in 2011 to tackle corruption. It has also faced a string of scandals within its ranks including a drugs bust, a land-grab deal and the suspension of two vice-presidents found in a “sexual position” on a beach.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Islamists beat liberals to maintain grip on power
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