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    • News
    • COVID-19

    Did Morocco's monarchy outperform democracies against COVID-19?

    Though many experts agree that Morocco's decisive response to the pandemic is a case study of success, some say it was at the cost of civil liberties.

    By Jacob Kushner // 31 August 2023

    MARRAKECH, Morocco — When COVID-19 vaccines became available in Africa, Morocco acted fast.  

    On Jan. 22, 2021, the country acquired two million doses of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine — days before it was approved for use in the European Union. Six days later, King Mohamed VI, the country’s ruling monarch, became the first recipient; his vaccination was broadcast on national television. Moroccans in Casablanca, Marrakech, and other cities said that seeing the king get vaccinated eased their fears.

    "The king is the political leader and the spiritual leader. So when he did his first public statement on the vaccine, he set an example," Rachid Ait Addi, an epidemiologist at Cadi Ayyad University in Marrakech, said.

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    More reading:

    ► The mind-boggling challenge of long COVID

    ► How can Africa’s trust be restored after the pandemic shattered it?

    ► Opinion: Africa is better prepared for future pandemics

    • Democracy, Human Rights & Governance
    • Trade & Policy
    • Global Health
    • Morocco
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    About the author

    • Jacob Kushner

      Jacob Kushner

      Jacob Kushner is an international journalist who writes about science, wildlife, and global health for such publications as National Geographic, BBC, New Scientist, and The Atlantic. His recent BBC Future series “Stopping the Next One” was a finalist for the 2021 Online Journalism Awards and longlisted for the 2021 Freelance Writing Awards.

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