Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
economics

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Aziz Akhannouch

Prime Minister of Morocco since 2021


Prime Minister of Morocco since 2021

FieldValue
honorific-prefixHis Excellency
nameAziz Akhannouch
imageFumio Kishida and Aziz Akhannouch before the funeral of Shinzo Abe (1) (cropped).jpg
smallimage
captionAkhannouch in 2022
officePrime Minister of Morocco
monarchMohammed VI
term_start7 October 2021
predecessorSaadeddine Othmani
office1Leader of the National Rally of Independents
term_start112 October 2016
predecessor1Salaheddine Mezouar
partyNational Rally of Independents (2007–2012, 2016–present)
otherpartyIndependent (2012–2016)
birth_date
birth_placeTafraout, Morocco
spouseSalwa Idrissi
alma_materUniversité de Sherbrooke
occupationBusinessman, Politician
website
native_nameعزيز أخنوش
ⵄⴰⵣⵉⵣ ⴰⵅⵏⵏⵓⵛ
relativesAbd al-Hady Akhannouch (brother)
children3
native_name_langar
office2Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries, Rural Development, Water and Forests
office3Minister of Agriculture and Fisheries
termstart26 April 2017
termstart315 October 2007
termend210 September 2021
termend36 April 2017
primeminister2Saadeddine Othmani
primeminister3Abbas El Fassi
Abdelilah Benkirane
predecessor2Himself (as Minister of Agriculture and Fisheries)
predecessor3Mohand Laenser
successor2Mohamed Sadiki
successor3Himself (as Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries, Rural Development, Water and Forests)

| honorific-prefix = His Excellency ⵄⴰⵣⵉⵣ ⴰⵅⵏⵏⵓⵛ Abdelilah Benkirane Aziz Akhannouch (, ; born 16 August 1961) is a Moroccan politician, businessman, and billionaire who has served as the Prime Minister of Morocco since 2021. He served as Minister of Agriculture from 2007 to 2021 and is also the CEO of Akwa Group. His political career has been generally characterized by several controversies, including accusations of corruption and negative relations with the press.

Akhannouch's government has been characterized by inflation, as well as continued protests and suppression of dissenting opinions.

Early life and education

Akhannouch was born in 1961 in Tafraout and raised in Casablanca. His mother and sister were survivors of the 1960 Agadir earthquake that killed ten of his family members; they were reported to have been left buried beneath rubble for several hours before being rescued.

In 1986, Akhannouch graduated from the Université de Sherbrooke with a management diploma.

Business

He is the CEO of Akwa Group, a Moroccan conglomerate particularly active in the oil and gas sector. Forbes estimated his net worth as $1.4 billion in November 2013. Akhannouch inherited Akwa from his father.

Political career

From 2003 to 2007, Akhannouch was the president of the Souss-Massa-Drâa regional council. He was a member of the National Rally of Independents party, before leaving it on 2 January 2012.

He served as Minister of Agriculture and Fisheries between 2007 and 2021. During this period, he successfully implemented the Green Morocco Plan, an ambitious agricultural development strategy that was introduced by King Mohammed VI in April 2008 and has received international recognition and admiration as a true model and example.

On 23 August 2013, he was appointed by King Mohammed VI as Minister of Finance on an interim basis after Istiqlal ministers resigned from Benkirane's cabinet, a position he kept until 9 October 2013.

On 27 July 2016, Akhannouch met with Jonathan Pershing, Special Envoy for Climate Change for the United States. They spoke about preparations for the 2016 United Nations Conference of the Parties.

On 29 October 2016, Akhannouch rejoined the RNI after being elected as president of the party. He succeeded Salaheddine Mezouar, who resigned after the 2016 general election.

In March 2020, through his company Afriquia, a subsidiary of the Akwa group, Akhannouch donated roughly one billion dirhams ($103.5 million) to a COVID-19 pandemic management fund founded by King Mohammed VI.

Prime Minister of Morocco (2021—present)

In the 2021 general election, his party placed first, winning 102 seats of the 395 seats, while the governing Justice and Development Party lost 113 of its previous seats. On 10 September 2021, he was appointed as prime minister by King Mohammed VI, succeeding Saadeddine Othmani, and was tasked by the King to form a new government.

Akhannouch announced the formation of an official coalition government alongside the PAM and Istiqlal parties on 22 September 2021, thus officiating his status as prime minister-designate of Morocco. On 7 October 2021, he assumed office as the new prime minister. Since taking office, Akhannouch has represented King Mohammed VI at several foreign engagements and read speeches delivered by him during summits, including at the 2021 United Nations Climate Change Conference.

In late October 2021, Akhannouch was criticized by Moroccan citizens for wearing a pin of the MENA region that excluded Western Sahara while attending a Green Initiative event in Saudi Arabia.

In September 2022, Akhannouch attended the 77th session of the United Nations General Assembly in New York.

On 11 October 2022, Akhannouch met with Prince Guillaume, Hereditary Grand Duke of Luxembourg along with his business partners in Rabat, in order to boost economic trade between Morocco and Luxembourg.

In December 2022, he attended the United States–Africa Leaders Summit 2022 and met with US president Joe Biden.

On 1 February 2023, Akhannouch participated with Spanish prime minister Pedro Sánchez in the 12th edition of the Morocco-Spain High Level Meeting in Rabat, in which both countries signed a total of 19 bilateral agreements concerning a plethora of sectors.

In July 2023, Akhannouch attended the 2023 Russia–Africa Summit in Saint Petersburg. In 2024, he attended the 2024 Italy–Africa Summit in Rome.

Controversies

Akhannouch was the target of several accusations of corruption during his time as Minister of Agriculture. In 2017, Hamid Chabat, then secretary general of the Istiqlal Party, accused him of stealing 13 billion Moroccan dirhams intended to go towards gas compensation during a party meeting. At a previous gathering in Fez, he additionally accused Akhannouch of corruption, and implied that his $2 billion fortune was the equivalent of "all that 30 million Moroccans own". An open letter to King Mohammed VI from blogger Maysa Salama al-Naji published online in June 2021 cited a 400-page report counting corruption charges against Akhannouch.

Akhannouch has been criticized over the suppression of dissenting opinions and imprisonment of opponents, alongside calls for an end to violations of freedom of speech and the right to peaceful demonstration.

17 billion case

In 2015 and 2016, after the Moroccan government of Abdelilah Benkirane decided to liberalize fuel prices, the fuel companies decided to collude with each other and not reduce prices. Among those companies was the Akwa company, owned by Akhannouch.

The profits of these companies amounted to about 17 billion dirhams (around US$1.75 billion), and several parties described them as immoral and illegal profits on the back of the Moroccan people. There were still several demands to restore them, whether in Parliament or in the media.

During the period following the case, the president of the Competition Council, , prepared a report on Akhannouch's illegal profits, and submitted it to King Mohammed VI. In March 2021, Guerraoui was relieved of his position and replaced by Ahmed Rahhou.

Press relations

As of 2016, the Ministry of Agriculture spent several million dirhams annually in massive advertising in the country's print press. If a newspaper criticized Akhannouch or his Green Morocco plan, it immediately saw the Ministry's advertisements cut off, along with those of the Akwa group.

In 2017, Akhannouch sued three journalists from the Badil news site for having criticized him. He demanded that they pay him one million dirhams.

2018 boycott

Main article: 2018 Moroccan boycott

In the spring of 2018, Morocco was shaken by a boycott movement launched against Centrale Danone, Sidi Ali (mineral water) and Akwa's subsidiary Afriquia. The three brands, which are major distributors of three basic products – milk, water and fuel – were accused by the population of charging very high prices. The movement became extremely popular, leading to reactions from the government.

According to the French think tank School of Thought on Economic Warfare (EPGE), which investigated the boycott movement, it was a campaign of "hierarchized" disinformation "therefore orchestrated by a precise political agenda", which would have benefited from a substantial budget, with for example between 100,000 and 500,000 euros for the purchase of online space to disseminate the ideas of the movement, as well as expensive donation campaigns to the poor to mobilize public opinion. According to the same study, the movement of Al Adl Wa Al Ihssane would be behind this boycott campaign with the aim of removing Akhanouch from the political scene.

Akhannouch himself said he "ignored" the boycott campaign while speaking to Jeune Afrique, accusing opponents of "exploiting Moroccans' hardship for political goals".

On 17 November 2018, Driss Guerraoui was appointed by King Mohammed VI as president of the Competition Council. In 2020, the Council recognized that the three brands targeted by the 2018 boycott campaign had reached an agreement on prices.

Milan comments

In December 2019, during a meeting in Milan with Moroccans living in Italy, Akhannouch declared, "Whoever believes that they can come and insult the institutions of the country has no place in Morocco. Whoever wants to live in Morocco must respect its motto and its democracy. Insults will not move us forward. And excuse me, but it is not justice that should do this job. […] We must re-educate Moroccans who lack education." The remarks triggered strong reactions from Moroccan politicians and citizens as well as a call for the resuming of the 2018 boycott of his companies. TelQuel attributed his comments in relation to the arrest & prosecution of a Moroccan YouTuber after he published a video criticizing King Mohammed VI's speeches. The Milan comments were alluded to in the popular music video "M3a L3echrane" by Dizzy DROS.

2021 election

In the runup to the 2021 general election, Abdellatif Ouahbi, Secretary General of the Authenticity and Modernity Party which later joined the government coalition, accused Akhannouch of "flooding the political scene with money", while the Justice and Development Party heading the outgoing coalition condemned the "obscene use of funds to lure voters and some polling station supervisors", without naming any parties. Additionally, the party also alleged "serious irregularities" in the voting process. Nabil Benabdallah, head of the Party of Progress and Socialism, criticized Akhannouch's party, the RNI, during an interview for giving sums of money to lure candidates from other parties "in full view of everyone". An RNI spokesperson contacted by Agence France-Presse said the accusations had been "rejected" by the party, and declined any further comments.

Rising prices and inflation

Throughout less than 200 days into Akhannouch's time in office, he became a target of Moroccans calling for his resignation, accusing him of corruption. The prices of fuel and several essential food products have skyrocketed in recent months, as the price of a 5-litre bottle of vegetable oil increased by 27 dirhams, while the price of 25 kg of semolina, widely used in Moroccan cuisine, increased by 50 dirhams. The inflation affected many vulnerable families, in which more than 430,000 Moroccans lost their jobs.

#Degage_Akhannouch campaign

In 2022, as fuel prices continued to rise, an online campaign emerged with tens of thousands of users on Twitter and Facebook using the three French hashtags #7dh_Gazoil, #8dh_Essence and #Degage_Akhannouch ("Get out Akhannouch") to call for an immediate decrease in gas prices, accusing Akhannouch and his company Afriquia of benefiting from the crisis. Abdelilah Benkirane, head of the Justice and Development Party (PJD) and former prime minister, said that he "didn't support" the online campaign, adding that "only Sidna (our lord) [King Mohammed VI] has the competence (…) to put an end to this cabinet and call for the organisation of early legislative elections". Nevertheless, several PJD members participated in the campaign.

2023 Marrakesh earthquake

On 8 September 2023, an earthquake with a magnitude of 6.8 Mw hit Marrakesh-Safi region of Morocco. Akhannouch received criticism from Moroccans for his absence and lack of management towards those affected by the earthquake. Two days after the earthquake occurred, he sent his condolences to families affected by the disaster. He pledged to rebuild all infrastructures destroyed in the earthquake.

Personal life

Akhannouch is married to Salwa Idrissi, a businesswoman who owns a company active in malls and holds the Moroccan franchises for brands such as Gap and Zara.

As Minister of Agriculture, Akhannouch hosted King Mohammed VI and his immediate family for Ramadan iftar on two separate occasions in 2013 and 2016.

On 21 November 2022, government spokesperson Mustapha Baitas announced that Akhannouch had tested positive for COVID-19.

References

References

  1. "Aziz Akhannouch".
  2. (2024-04-18). "ⵜⴰⵔⵉⴷⵉⵔⵜ ⵜⴰⵏⴽⴽⵉⵏⵜ".
  3. "Petroleum group of Morocco Denounces Chabat's Rumors about Akhannouch".
  4. "حكومة أخنوش تدعم الفساد وتهدد استقرار البلاد".
  5. "Biographie du Chef du Gouvernement".
  6. Bihmidine, Omar. (12 October 2013). "Profile of Aziz Akhannouch, Minister of Agriculture and Marine Fisheries".
  7. "Aziz Akhannouch, the billionaire ally of Morocco's Mohammed VI".
  8. (2016). "Historical Dictionary of Morocco". Rowman & Littlefield.
  9. "Parcours : Les success stories du souss".
  10. "Aziz Akhannouch & family". Forbes.
  11. "Africa's Richest Billionaires 2020".
  12. Saad-Alami, Youness. (27 September 2011). "Agriculture solidaire: Le coup de pouce d'Akhannouch Entretien avec le ministre de l'Agriculture et de la Pêche maritime".
  13. (9 September 2011). "Morocco: Gov't Advocates Comparative Advantages Benefiting Agricultural Countries in International Markets". allafrica.com.
  14. (2023-10-25). "Biography".
  15. (28 July 2016). "US Climate Change Special Envoy in Morocco for COP 22 Discussions".
  16. "Aziz Akhannouch Elected President of RNI".
  17. Hekking, Morgan. (17 March 2020). "Moroccan Government Members Donate Salaries to COVID-19 Fund".
  18. (15 March 2020). "Morocco to create $1 billion fund to counter coronavirus outbreak". Reuters.
  19. (10 September 2021). "Le Roi Mohammed VI nomme Aziz Akhannouch chef du gouvernement".
  20. "Mohammed VI nomme Aziz Akhannouch Chef de gouvernement".
  21. (2021-09-10). "Morocco's king names businessman Aziz Akhannouch to lead new government".
  22. "Moroccan king appoints Aziz Akhannouch as gov't head".
  23. "Aziz Akhannouch named as Morocco's new PM – DW – 09/11/2021".
  24. (22 September 2021). "Morocco's premier Akhannouch announces coalition agreement". Al Jazeera.
  25. "Morocco names new government, keeps foreign, interior ministers".
  26. (8 October 2021). "Morocco names new government, keeps foreign and interior ministers". Reuters.
  27. (2021-11-02). "HM the King Sends Speech to 26th UN Climate Change Conference (Full Text)".
  28. "Aziz Akhannouch Faces Backlash for Tolerating Display of Incomplete Moroccan Map".
  29. (2022-09-19). "On High Instructions from HM the King, Gov't Chief Chairs Morocco's Delegation to 77th UN General Assembly".
  30. Rahhou, Jihane. "Morocco, Luxembourg Vow To Boost Business Partnerships". Morocco World news.
  31. (2022-10-11). "رئيس الحكومة يستقبل ولي عهد اللوكسمبورغ".
  32. "Morocco, Luxembourg share resolve to promote partnership & economic cooperation – The North Africa Post".
  33. (15 December 2022). "Joe Biden watches Morocco vs. France game with Weah, Buhari, Moroccan PM". Africanews.
  34. Kasraoui, Safaa. "High-Level Meeting: Spain, Morocco Celebrate Strategic Depth of Bilateral Ties".
  35. (2023-02-01). "12th Morocco-Spain HLM: President of Spanish government arrives in Morocco".
  36. Kasraoui, Safaa. "Spain, Morocco Sign 19 Agreements to Deepen Economic, Bilateral Cooperation".
  37. (2023-02-02). "Rabat and Madrid sign 19 memorandums of understanding, as bilateral summit closes".
  38. (2023-07-27). "Aziz Akhannouch représente S.M. le Roi au 2è Sommet Russie-Afrique".
  39. (2024-01-29). "Le Chef du gouvernement représente SM le Roi au Sommet "Italie-Afrique : Un pont pour une croissance commune"".
  40. (2024-01-29). "Italy-Africa Summit: Gov't Chief Received by Italian President".
  41. "مايسة تهاجم أخنوش وتحصي تهم الفساد الموجهة إليه". أشطاري 24.
  42. (2019-01-19). "شبيبة البيجيدي تطلق النار على "أخنوش" وتطالب باستعادة 17 مليار".
  43. akhbarona.com. (30 June 2019). ""بلافريج" يكشف المستور لـ"أخبارنا" ويفضح بالأدلة تواطؤ حكومة "العثماني" مع شركات المحروقات".
  44. (2018-11-17). "برلمانية تسائل مقترح استرجاع 17 مليار درهم من شركات المحروقات".
  45. ""البيجيدي": شركات المحروقات مطالبة بإرجاع مبلغ 17 مليار درهم ومنحه لصندوق "كورونا"".
  46. (2018-06-13). "مقترح لاسترجاع 17 مليارا من الأرباح غير المشروعة للمحروقات".
  47. "هكذا أحرقت المحروقات الكراوي وأبعدته عن مجلس المنافسة – الجريدة 24".
  48. (2021-03-24). "خلافات حول تقرير المحروقات تُبعد إدريس الكراوي من "مجلس المنافسة" المغربي".
  49. "Maroc : Aziz Akhannouch, le magnat qui bouscule la politique".
  50. Yabiladi.com. "Médias : Akhannouch porte plainte contre trois journalistes marocains".
  51. Saleh, Heba. (2018-06-07). "Morocco's biggest businesses hit by online boycott campaign". Financial Times.
  52. (19 February 2019). "Maroc : le boycott aura coûté 178 millions d'euros à Danone – Jeune Afrique".
  53. Ollivier, Théa. "Au Maroc, un boycott surprise contre la vie chère".
  54. HARBULOT, Christian. (2019-09-25). "Boycott au Maroc en 2018 Analyse d'une campagne de déstabilisation informationnelle".
  55. El Atti, Basma. (2022-07-18). "Massive digital campaign spurt up against Morocco's rich PM".
  56. "Akhannouch: "Le boycott a touché l'économie marocaine dans son ensemble"".
  57. (23 November 2018). "Maroc : les dossiers qui attendent Driss Guerraoui, nouveau président du Conseil de la concurrence".
  58. (2021-09-17). "Aziz Akhannouch, milliardaire et premier ministre du Maroc".
  59. ""Il faut rééduquer les Marocains" : les propos d'Akhannouch suscitent l'indignation".
  60. (2019-12-27). "Morocco: YouTuber jailed for 'insulting the king'".
  61. Rim. (2023-02-15). "جدل حول أغنية «راب» مغربية تهاجم السياسيين والمثقفين والصحافيين".
  62. (4 October 2021). "Morocco: Accusations of corruption swirl around election campaign".
  63. "Moderate parties win big in Moroccan elections – DW – 09/09/2021".
  64. El Atti, Basma. (2022-02-16). "'Akhannouch out': Moroccans call on PM to resign over rising prices".
  65. Rabat, Basma El Atti ــ. (2022-02-16). "Moroccans call on PM Akhannouch to resign over rising prices".
  66. "#Dégage_Akhannouch : sur internet, la colère contre la cherté de la vie se focalise sur le chef du gouvernement marocain".
  67. "Aziz Akhannouch dans le collimateur des réseaux sociaux".
  68. Kasraoui, Safaa. "#DegageAkhannouch: 'I am Not Fake Account' Campaign Trending in Morocco".
  69. Yabiladi.com. "Benkirane s'oppose à la campagne réclamant le départ d'Akhannouch du gouvernement".
  70. (2023-09-08). "Morocco earthquake: More than 2,000 dead as tremors felt in several regions". BBC News.
  71. "Over 2,000 dead as powerful earthquake hits Morocco near Marrakesh".
  72. لمريني, كمال. (2023-09-11). "المغاربة يتساءلون: أين اختفى أخنوش ومؤسسة جود خلال زلزال الحوز؟".
  73. Mouhtadi, Soukaina. (2023-09-11). "أخنوش وزملاؤه تحت الضغط: زلزال الحوز يشعل الانتقادات على الحكومة".
  74. (2023-09-10). "Akhannouch offers condolences to Moroccans, assures them of the Executive's support".
  75. (2023-09-10). "رئيس الحكومة يعزي عائلات ضحايا الزلزال - هبة بريس".
  76. boudouira, mohamed. (2023-09-10). "أخنوش يعزي عائلات ضحايا الزلـ.ـزال وينوه بتدخلات السلطات وتضامن المغاربة".
  77. (2023-09-11). "Akhannouch pledges Morocco will rebuild infrastructures destroyed by earthquake".
  78. Oudrhiri, Kaouthar. (2016-06-23). "Le roi Mohammed VI prend le f'tour chez Akhannouch". Telquel.
  79. (2022-11-21). "بايتاس يعلن إصابة رئيس الحكومة بـ"كورونا"".
  80. Kasraoui, Safaa. "Morocco's Head of Government Aziz Akhannouch Tests Positive for COVID-19".
  81. "Aziz Akhannouch testé positif au Covid-19, H24info".
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Aziz Akhannouch — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report