Search Site

Trends banner

Oracle shares up 35%

Huge AI contracts lead to the surge.

ADCB to raise $1.66bn

The rights issue aimed at boosting growth.

EGA H1 revenue $4.11bn

Net profit before GAC $445 million.

Borouge to pay $660m H1 dividend

Its net profit for H1 was $474 million.

TAQA secures $2.31bn loan

It will be utilized in a phased manner.

Morocco appoints new second-in-command amid tensions with Algeria

Morocco's King Mohammed VI.
  • At the handover Farouk, 75, whose successor is around seven years younger, was in wheelchair, and no reason for the change was given
  • The change coincides with heightened tensions with Algeria after the collapse of a decades-old ceasefire in the Western Sahara

Rabat, Morocco–Morocco’s King Mohammed VI on Saturday appointed a new second-in-command of the armed forces, a release from the royal palace said, amid tensions with neighbour Algeria over the Western Sahara.

Under the North African country’s constitution, the king himself commands the armed forces.

His new number two is Inspector General Mohammed Berid who replaces General Belkhir El Farouk, the announcement carried by the official MAP news agency said.

No reason for the change was given, but at the handover Farouk, 75, appeared in a wheelchair. His successor is around seven years younger and was in charge of the zone that includes disputed Western Sahara.

Also read: Morocco denounces ‘provocative’ acts in Algeria football cup

According to the website Global Firepower, Morocco has about 310,000 regular soldiers and 150,000 reservists.

Saturday’s change comes during months of heightened tensions with Algeria after the collapse of a decades-old ceasefire in the Western Sahara and Morocco’s normalisation of ties with Israel in late 2020.

The Algiers-backed Polisario Front seeks independence for the Western Sahara which Rabat says is Moroccan territory.

Antagonism between the two Maghreb states is also feeding a regional arms race.

The United States has just approved the sale of 18 HIMARS precision rocket systems to Morocco, while the Algerian armed forces rely mainly on equipment from Russia.