Think Forward.

C'est l'asile des fous dans le tennis marocain!!!! 4492

Comme chaque année les organisateurs du GP Hassan II (FRMT) donnent 3 Wild Cards à des joueurs mal classés afin de pouvoir participer au tournoi de tennis de rang ATP250. Dans ce cas de figure, comme partout dans le monde, la préférence nationale est de vigueur. ◆On a donné la 1ere WC à Elliot Benchetrit, numéro 2 marocain et classé 661 dans l'ATP avec 48pts ◆Le numéro 1 marocain, Yassine Dlimi classé 609 dans l'ATP avec 56pts a refusé la WC car en prétextant qu'il a mieux à faire avec son université américaine en participant à des contests non reconnu par l'ATP. Va comprendre le professionnalisme de ce joueur. ◆Le phénomène marocain Reda Bennani 19eme chez les juniors et 1200 en ATP avec 6pts est toujours snobé et ignoré par la fédération à cause d'un conflit avec ses parents. Donc pas de WC pour lui. ◆Le numéro 3 marocain Adam Moundir, seul tennisman boursier du comité olympique avec 3500dhs mensuel. Je vous rappelle que le président du CNOM est au président de la FRMT et président de la SNRT. On se demande s'il maitrise aussi le clonage. Donc Adam Moundir, 760eme ATP avec 31pts est porté disparu sur le circuit depuis Octobre 2023!!! Il n'a pas recu de WC lui aussi, compréhensible quand même mais bon pourquoi il est tjrs boursier??? Un petit peu absurde!!! ◆Le numéro 4 marocain Younes Lalami Laaroussi, encore 1098eme en ATP avec 9pts, a du je crois abandonner carrément le tennis après avoir déclaré forfait comme un lâche devant un tennisman israélien. En fin de compte la FRMT a donné ses 2 dernières WC au tunisien Aziz Dougaz 234eme ATP et au jordanien Abdullah Shelbayh 229eme ATP alors qu'il n'y a pas de tournoi majeurs dans ses 2 pays pour qu'ils rendent la pareille à nos joueurs marocains. Impossible de dissocier le panarabisme de nos chibanis toujours au pouvoir au Maroc.
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Saad M Saad M

Saad M

Interest in Economics, Geopolitics, History and Sports.


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Law 30-09 on Physical Education and Sports in Morocco: An Obsolete Brake on Sport Development... 75

Promulgated in 2010, Law 30-09 aimed to modernize Moroccan sports governance, regulate the associative movement, and pave the way for professionalization. Fourteen years later, its record is mixed: while it established a formal structure, it has always been said that it fails to meet the demands of modern sports and lacks incentives and encouragement. Today, it is accused of being a **structural brake** on Moroccan sports due to its rigid, ill-adapted, and partially unconstitutional framework. Worse still, launched well before the royal letter to the sports assemblies of 2008, the project underwent no adjustments to align with royal directives. The authors likely believed it sufficiently addressed the letter's content and saw no need to withdraw it. The questioning, already sharp since its promulgation, has intensified in light of the 2011 Constitution, which elevates physical activity to a citizen's right and requires the State to promote high-level sports while fostering associative participation. The approach of the 2030 World Cup, moreover, demands urgent legislative adaptation. During the 4th edition of the African Days of Investment and Employment, dedicated to football as a vector for socio-economic inclusion and organized by the Faculty of Legal, Economic, and Social Sciences-Souissi in Rabat, the president of the Royal Moroccan Football Federation, Fouzi Lekjaa, stated bluntly that Law 30-09 had run its course and that a new version was needed to support the country's sporting development. The main issues first stem from a **discordance with the 2011 Constitution**. Designed before this fundamental revision, Law 30-09 does not explicitly guarantee the right to sports as a citizen's right. It limits associative freedom through a discretionary approval regime, contradicting the constitutional principle of freedom of association enshrined in the 1958 Public Freedoms Code, which remains in force. Similarly, it assigns the State a vague role in regulation and funding, undermining federations' autonomy and exposing them to administrative paralysis. It is also clear that there is **ambiguity in the status of professional athletes**. Despite constitutional recognition of the right to work and social protection, the law defines neither a clear sports contract nor specific protections. This legal vacuum fuels recurrent conflicts between clubs, players, and federations. A **disconnect with modern sports** is also evident. Tied to a bureaucratic and centralized vision, the law ignores international standards and performance- or objective-based governance mechanisms. Professionalization remains incomplete: clubs lack stable legal structures, economic models are precarious, and private investors are discouraged. The role of local authorities remains unclear, despite advanced regionalization, making sports investments dependent on local wills rather than a coherent national framework. The law's rigidity hampers rapid contracting, flexibility for infrastructure, and federations' independence. It generates administrative delays for public-private partnerships, the absence of status for sports companies, and difficulties integrating international norms, thus blocking attractiveness for private capital. One can thus suspect its **incompatibility with FIFA requirements and the 2030 World Cup**. Criticism extends to the education sector with a certain **inadequacy with educational reform**. While Morocco invests in school and university sports, the law omits any systemic integration between schools, universities, clubs, and federations, as well as pathways between mass and elite sports. The law unduly mixes amateur and professional sports, without distinguishing associative management from clubs' commercial activities. Another weakness lies in the definition of concepts and thus the clear assignment of resulting responsibilities. It subjects the associative fabric, the pillar of the sports movement, to excessive oversight, creating legal insecurity and constant workarounds. Finally, it conceives sports as an educational or cultural activity, ignoring its economic potential: sports jobs, sponsorship, broadcasting rights, specific taxation, and job creation. Conceived in a pre-constitutional context, Law 30-09 is today **obsolete, rigid, and partially unconstitutional**. It hinders governance, professionalization, and the sports economy at a time when Morocco is projecting itself toward major global events. The situation thus leads to the need for a new law: modern, aligned with the Constitution, the intent of the 2008 royal letter, the demands of modern sports in line with international bodies, and responsive to the imperatives for the 2030 World Cup, while inventing a new mode of management and administration detached from political timelines. A mission-oriented administration is widely desired. The new law must align with the constitutional framework by clearly defining concepts, enshrining sports as a citizen's right, protecting associative freedom, and clarifying the State's role (framing, funding, audits, performance contracts). It should distinguish between amateur and professional sports, between clubs and associations, and establish full professionalization: professional athlete status, mandatory sports companies for clubs, regulation of private investments. It must enable sports integration into the national economy via a dedicated tax framework, specific investment code, sectoral recognition, and modernization of sponsorship and TV rights. It must harmonize with FIFA 2030 requirements through greater flexibility, regulate infrastructure, and secure major projects. The new law should define the State's responsibilities in training frameworks and required levels, making academic training the foundation of a national system capable of meeting practice demands and society's true needs. It must also specify the role and responsibilities of regions and local authorities in mass sports, proximity infrastructure creation, and supervision—a sort of municipalization of mass physical activities. This long-awaited new law is **urgent, strategic, and essential** to align Moroccan sports with international standards and national ambitions.

The Radiance of a Lady 125

​Your love illuminates my heart, And you have forbidden me to reveal this honor. How can the light of your brilliance be dimmed When it radiates from everywhere? It shines like a sapphire, a diamond, or a jewel, And dazzles everyone with your blonde beauty. You do not believe in my love, In turn, While I can love no one else but you; This is my destiny, this is my faith. You are my heart and my soul, You are my destiny, you are my law. I cannot bear it when you are far away, beautiful woman, You who soothe my heart in flames. In you, I find all my vows, You who make my days happy. ​Dr. Fouad Bouchareb Inspired by an Andalusian music piece, "Bassit Ibahane" December 13, 2025 https://youtu.be/wlvhOVGyLek?si=5tt6cm0oChF1NQJJ