✍️ BY: Maamar Gani
Algiers – October 2025 – Once again, the trembling hand of the Moroccan Makhzen reaches toward Algeria in a desperate attempt to export its internal crises, fabricating hollow media bubbles such as the mythical and fictitious “GenZ 213.” The delusion is clear: the Makhzen imagines it can mislead Algerian public opinion as it has deceived its own people for decades. Yet the truth is glaring as daylight—Algeria is not Morocco, and its people do not need to import a movement, for their authentic uprising came in 2019: peaceful, civilized, and met with state responsiveness. Not a single bullet was fired at demonstrators, not a drop of blood was shed.
Moroccans must remember well: when Algerian youth filled the streets, they did so under the protection of their army and police—forces that safeguarded them, not harmed them. Contrast this with Morocco, where since September 27th, a relentless protest movement has shaken the country, met only with batons, mass arrests, and prisons. The Makhzen’s only response has been repression, brutality, and bloodshed—three young men already paid with their lives, victims of a regime that knows only coercion and violence.
The difference is as bright as the sun. In Algeria, political leadership is of the people and for the people. President Abdelmadjid Tebboune addresses Algerians regularly, confronts files openly, punishes negligent officials, and repeats with clarity: “The citizen is a red line.” In Morocco, by contrast, the king is seen only through carefully staged photographs from Parisian or Zanzibar palaces—remote, absent, and detached from his people’s suffering. A nation torn between a vanishing monarch and impotent institutions has erupted in anger, now demanding nothing short of the regime’s downfall.
In Algeria, security services exist to protect citizens and ensure peace so daily life can flourish in stability. Even at the height of the 2019 Hirak, not a hair of any protester was harmed, with the authorities ensuring safety for all. In Morocco, there are no “security services” for the people—there are criminals in royal uniforms, whose sole task is to shield the king, his family, and the oligarchic pillars of the Makhzen from the people’s wrath. These forces unleash repression and persecution upon citizens whenever they dare to peacefully demand their stolen rights.
The Algerian Press Service was unequivocal in its statement: the so-called calls for protests on Friday, October 3rd are not genuine social demands, but rather a dirty political maneuver designed to export Morocco’s crises abroad and undermine Algeria’s internal cohesion.
Algeria, with its revolutionary history and liberating principles, raises the banner of Palestine and Western Sahara and defends the oppressed, while the Makhzen has stained itself with the shame of normalization with the colonial Zionist entity. It participated in the siege of Gaza, opened its doors to Israeli intelligence operatives, and turned its back on dignity. Is it not shameful that Moroccan authorities suppress weekly protests that have continued into their second year simply because the people refuse normalization and chant against Israel?
The contrasts grow starker still. Algeria is a genuine social state: raising wages, subsidizing essential goods, providing housing, and safeguarding free healthcare and education. Morocco, in contrast, has surrendered to savage neoliberalism—leaving its citizens to face hunger, poverty, collapsing health and education systems. Moroccan women die en masse in maternity wards due to a lack of the most basic medical equipment, while the regime, in a desperate bid for legitimacy, wastes billions to host a World Cup and build colossal stadiums—on land devoid of hospitals, schools, or citizen infrastructure.
Is it any wonder Moroccan youth now chant: “No World Cup without hospitals!” “Bread, not stadiums!” “Health and education, not billions for FIFA!” The Makhzen seeks to polish its image with sports diplomacy while its cities drown in misery and its people suffocate under repression.
Meanwhile, Algeria will greet Friday, October 3rd as an ordinary day: citizens will attend prayers, visit families, take their children to gardens and beaches, and enjoy the autumn breeze. The nation remains fortified by its internal unity, vigilant against the Makhzen’s conspiracies, and certain that no imported “GenZ” slogans or foreign-manufactured movements can shake it.
It is the Makhzen that sows the wind and reaps the storm. It is the regime that wagered on Zionism, selling Morocco’s sovereignty, only to find itself besieged by a grassroots revolution demanding its end and proclaiming the expiration of Mohammed VI’s rule.
Algerians have moved beyond their noble Hirak into a new era of triumph under wise leadership that genuinely represents its people. Moroccans, by contrast, are entering the decisive phase of their own revolution. The distinction between the two nations is too stark to obscure with propaganda: Algeria is building, reforming, and confronting its shortcomings with courage. Morocco is collapsing under the weight of betrayal, normalization, and popular rage.
The Algerian Hirak concluded honorably in 2019. The Moroccan uprising has only just begun—and it will not end until the Makhzen and Mohammed VI are gone. One nation is building with confidence; the other is crumbling beneath treachery and tyranny. No lie can mask this reality, no propaganda can falsify it.
Let Moroccans heed these words carefully. Their uprising must remain in their hands, not be hijacked by the criminal cabal of the Makhzen. In Algeria, both people and leadership wish them nothing but liberation and dignity. For only when Morocco is free from monarchy, free from Zionist servitude, and free from foreign agendas, can the Maghreb Union return to its rightful path—a union of peoples emancipated from colonialism and expansionist regimes.
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