Rabat – Morocco’s youth-led GenZ212 movement announced yesterday plans for a new round of peaceful demonstrations next weekend.
They argued that while recent government reforms announced during the ministerial council show progress, they fall short of delivering the deep structural change citizens have been demanding.
In a statement released this week, the movement said it will “continue its peaceful mobilization for the popular demands adopted by all Moroccans across classes and generations,” noting that the previous phase of protests has already “yielded some gains, such as the increase in health and education budgets, and certain measures to improve political integrity.”
However, GenZ212 warned that these measures are “insufficient despite their importance,” adding that “there has been no explicit commitment or clear mechanisms to combat corruption, conflicts of interest, and to link responsibility with accountability, conditions necessary to bring about real change in our country.”
The statement also insisted that “none of this will have any meaning unless all detainees are released and their families’ suffering brought to an end,” in reference to arrests made during recent demonstrations across the country.
GenZ212 concluded by announcing that “peaceful demonstrations will be organized in several cities to be determined later, on Saturday and Sunday.”
Emerging on September 27, GenZ212 has quickly become one of Morocco’s most visible grassroots movements, uniting thousands of young Moroccans under shared demands for greater transparency, better public services, and accountability among elected officials.
The group has relied heavily on social media to mobilize supporters and articulate its demands, from combating corruption and improving living standards to reforming education and healthcare.
Its statements often strike a balance between civic engagement and criticism of systemic issues, insisting on nonviolence and “peaceful pressure” to bring about change.
Recent government actions, including swift budget increases for health and education and measures to clean up political practices, were previously welcomed by the group as “a first step toward rebuilding long-lost trust.”
Yet, as this latest call shows, GenZ212 maintains that Morocco’s reform process must go further, toward tangible accountability and the immediate release of detained peaceful protesters.