Le Monde… Poisonous campaigns collide with the unity of the throne and the people
Oussar Ahmed
Le Monde is no longer a newspaper but a failed echo of hired pens seeking cheap thrills. Every article about Morocco, every rumor regarding the health of the king, the crown prince, or territorial integrity, is merely another episode in a tedious saga, where its authors insist on ignoring the steadfast truth: Morocco is strong, united, and resilient.
This country is neither fragile, nor is its monarchy merely a paper image. Morocco’s roots extend deep into history, confidently advancing in every field. Its major projects speak for themselves: the high-speed train, the ports of Tangier, Nador, and Dakhla, solar energy and green hydrogen, the automotive industry, and infrastructure that connects the north with the south and the east with the west. These achievements are not mere slogans but tangible realities known and experienced daily by every Moroccan.
Nonetheless, Le Monde has chosen to veer away from professionalism for years. Court rulings in France and Spain have proven this: unfounded defamation, flimsy accusations, distortion of facts, and the humiliation of the reputations of businessmen and representatives. Today, it repeats the same mistakes with Morocco, believing it can provoke anxiety or undermine the trust between the king and his people.
Moroccans are no longer easy prey for rumors. Any attempt to toy with national unity or to question the monarchy only tightens the bond of the people around their leadership. The trust between the throne and the people is not a fantasy but a daily reality witnessed in every sector, city, and village. This truth surpasses any poisoned articles and affirms Morocco’s ability to withstand malicious media campaigns.
Le Monde and the guardians of the old temple in Paris have yet to understand that Morocco today is an independent regional player, a strong partner, and an unyielding counterpart. Any poisoned article you write will not shake our stability nor alter the reality of the achievements and progress we have all accomplished.
The question is no longer: what does Le Monde say about Morocco? But rather: what do its absurdities reveal about itself? The answer is loud and clear: a newspaper that has lost its stars and slipped into cheap propaganda, incapable of understanding a country that writes its history with confidence, maintains its unity with firmness, and solidifies the bond between the throne and the people as a rock that is unshakable by all attempts at doubt.
Moroccans know the magnitude of what they have achieved and are aware of the strength of their country. Anyone who believes that the absurdities of Le Monde or others can break their will is mistaken. The Moroccan sun does not set, and the future being forged by the people and their king will remain bright, no matter how much foreign press seeks to obscure the truth.
