Wednesday, December 25

Tawakol Karman, Winner Of Nobel Peace Prize, Says She Admires Morocco’s Choice To Make Change In Stability

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Rabat  –  The Yemeni winner of the 2011 Nobel Peace Prize, Tawakol Karman, expressed, on Saturday in Rabat, her admiration for the Moroccan experience through which the Kingdom has made the change in stability.

Tawakkol Karman told MAP news agency and TV channel “2M” the Moroccan model “is reflected through a real partnership between the various political parties in Morocco.”

This experience is assured by a democracy extended through time, noted Karman, who attended the opening session of the 7th National Caucus of the ruling Justice and Development Party (PJD).

Moroccans lived “Arab spring” in a different way that has not reached desperation, she added, stressing that everything is “going in the right direction.”

Karman told the caucus that she admired the fight of the components of the Moroccan people, “Arab, Amazigh and Sahrawi, women, youth and civil society to consolidate good governance,” welcoming particularly the battle of Moroccan women to strengthen its presence and participation in political life.

   Tawakkol Karman, the first Arab woman to receive the Nobel Prize for Peace, has played a leading role in triggering the movement of popular protest in Yemen as part of the “Arab Spring.”

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