Two-year long Moroccan Occupation of Silver Mine

An activist with the Berber flag.
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An activist with the Berber flag. Protesters have occupied a hilltop above a silver mine for more than two years.

An activist with the Berber flag. Pro­test­ers have occu­pied a hill­top above a sil­ver mine for more than two years.

A Jan. 23 pro­file in the New York Times put a rare spot­light on the ongo­ing occu­pa­tion camp estab­lished by Berber vil­lagers at Mount Aleb­ban, 5,000 feet high in the Atlas Moun­tains of Moroc­co, to protest the oper­a­tions of the Imiter Met­talur­gic Min­ing Company—whose prin­ci­pal own­er is the North African nation’s King Mohammed VI.

The occu­pa­tion was first launched in 1996, but bro­ken up by the author­i­ties. It was revived in the sum­mer of 2011, after stu­dents from the local vil­lage of Imider, who were used to get­ting sea­son­al jobs at the mine, were turned down. That led the villagers—even those with jobs at the complex—to again estab­lish a per­ma­nent encamp­ment block­ing access to the site of Africa’s most pro­duc­tive sil­ver mine.

A key griev­ance is the mine’s use of local water sources, which is mak­ing agri­cul­ture in the arid region increas­ing­ly unten­able. Pro­test­ers closed a pipe valve, cut­ting off the water sup­ply to the mine. Since then, the mine’s out­put has plummeted—40% in 2012 and a fur­ther 30% in 2013. But Imider farm­ers say their long-dry­ing wells are start­ing to replen­ish, and their shriv­eled orchards are again start­ing to bear fruit.

 

In addi­tion to pro­tec­tion of local waters, vil­lagers are demand­ing that 75% of the jobs at the mine be allo­cat­ed to their munic­i­pal­i­ty. But more gen­er­al demands for Berber cul­tur­al rights and dig­ni­ty also ani­mate the protest, with the Berber flag fly­ing above the encamp­ment.

A 2011 con­sti­tu­tion­al reform, the fruit of a protest move­ment inspired by those across the Arab world, grant­ed greater cul­tur­al rights to the Berbers who (by lan­guage) con­sti­tute near­ly half Morocco’s pop­u­la­tion. But the Berbers remain dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly affect­ed by pover­ty and mar­gin­al­iza­tion. The area around Mount Aleb­ban is among the poor­est zones of Moroc­co.

The Imider pro­test­ers say they are will­ing to talk, but nei­ther the gov­ern­ment nor the min­ing com­pa­ny have come to the table, appar­ent­ly opt­ing for a strat­e­gy of wait­ing the move­ment out. (Eth­i­cal Con­sumer, Jan. 28; Yabi­la­di, Jan. 27; Reuters, Feb. 20, 2012)