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Report on Human Rights Practices for 2000
Morocco
The Constitution provides for a monarchy with a
Parliament and an independent judiciary; however, ultimate authority rests
with the King, who presides over the Council of Ministers, appoints all
members of the Government, and may, at his discretion, terminate the tenure
of any minister, dissolve the Parliament, call for new elections, and rule
by decree. The late King Hassan II, who ruled for 38 years, was
succeeded by his son, King Mohammed VI, in July 1999. Since the
constitutional reform of 1996, the bicameral legislature consists of a
lower house, the Chamber of Representatives, which is elected through
universal suffrage, and an upper house, the Chamber of Counselors, whose
members are elected by various regional, local, and professional councils.
The councils' members themselves are elected directly. The lower
house of Parliament also may dissolve the Government through a vote of no
confidence. In March 1998, King Hassan named a coalition government
headed by opposition socialist leader Abderrahmane Youssoufi and composed
largely of ministers drawn from opposition parties. Prime Minister
Youssoufi's Government is the first government drawn primarily from
opposition parties in decades, and also represents the first opportunity
for a coalition of socialist, left-of-center, and nationalist parties to be
included in the Government. The November 1997 parliamentary elections
were held amid widespread, credible reports of vote buying by political
parties and the Government, and excessive government interference.
The fraud and government pressure tactics led most independent observers to
conclude that the results of the election were heavily influenced, if not
predetermined, by the Government. After a long appeals process, some
of the results were overturned by the Constitutional Council during the
year and new by-elections were held. In September the Government
reported that various political parties had engaged in vote-buying and
fraud during indirect elections to replace one-third of the 270 seats in
the Chamber of Counselors, Parliament's upper house. The Government
criticized the electoral corruption, indicating that it would investigate
and prosecute those concerned; however, few of the cases involving
electoral fraud had been presented before the courts or prosecuted by
year's end. The judiciary historically has been subject to bribery
and government influence; however, the Youssoufi Government continued to
implement a reform program to develop greater independence and
impartiality.
The security apparatus includes several overlapping
police and paramilitary organizations. The Border Police and the
National Security Police are departments of the Ministry of Interior, the
Judicial Police falls under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Justice,
and the Royal Gendarmerie reports to the Palace. Some members of the
security forces continued to commit serious human rights abuses.
The economy is based on large phosphate reserves, a
diverse agricultural sector, fisheries, a sizable and growing tourist
industry, a growing manufacturing sector (especially textiles), and a
dynamic, deregulated telecommunications sector. There are
considerable remittances from citizens working abroad. The illegal
production and export of cannabis also is a significant economic activity,
particularly in the north. Economic growth is highly dependent on
agricultural output, which has been affected adversely by 2 consecutive
years of worsening drought. According to the Government's statistics,
the real gross domestic product (GDP) shrank by 0.7 percent in 1999.
A similar outcome is estimated for 2000.
The Government generally respected the rights of its
citizens in most areas; however, the Government's record was generally poor
in a few areas, and there were some notable setbacks. Citizens do not
have the full right to change their government. While then-King
Hassan II's appointment of a first-ever opposition coalition government in
1998 marked a significant step toward democratization, officially
recognized corruption and vote-buying in the September Chamber of
Counselors elections constituted a notable setback. There were
reports of several suspicious deaths in police custody. Some members
of the security forces occasionally tortured or otherwise abused detainees,
and beat protesters on numerous occasions. Despite some progress by
the Government, human rights groups continue to call for full disclosure of
all available information concerning citizens abducted by the Government
from the 1960's through the 1980's. Despite significant efforts by
the Government, prison conditions remain harsh. Authorities sometimes
arbitrarily arrest and detain persons. The judiciary historically has
been subject to corruption and Interior Ministry influence; however, the
Government continued to implement judicial reforms in order to increase the
level of the judiciary's independence and impartiality. Nonetheless,
human rights organizations and activists alleged a lack of due process in
several high-profile court trials, including 2 controversial military court
trials involving an air force captain who, after criticizing corruption in
the military to a foreign news publication, ultimately was sentenced to
21/2 years in prison for violating the Military Code; five Sahrawi youths
who, after being arrested in Laayoune for throwing stones at police, were
sentenced to 5 to 10 years' imprisonment for forming a criminal
association; and unemployed graduates who were detained during protests in
Rabat in June. At times authorities infringed on citizens' privacy
rights. The Government's record on press freedom was inconsistent
during the year. While the Government permitted extensive coverage of
formerly taboo topics it systematically restricted press freedom on several
specific topics that it considers sensitive, and on which journalists
continue to practice self-censorship, including criticism of the Monarchy,
Morocco's claim to the Western Sahara, and the sanctity of Islam. It
appeared that the Government also increased restrictions on both domestic
and international media to prevent reporting on some topics with the
potential to reflect negatively on the country's international image.
The Government censored and banned at least 12 domestic and foreign
publications during the year. On December 2, Prime Minister Youssoufi
used the highly controversial and long-criticized Article 77 of the Press
Code to ban three investigative weekly newspapers. The Government
limited freedom of assembly and association. In numerous incidents
during the year, police beat and violently dispersed demonstrators.
The Government limited freedom of religion. Although non-Muslim
foreigners may practice their religions freely, missionaries who
proselytize face expulsion, and converts from Islam to other religions
continue to experience social ostracism. The Government monitors the
activities of mosques. During the summer, the Government prevented
members of an Islamist group, whose leader has questioned the legitimacy of
the Monarchy, from gaining access to campgrounds and beaches for group
prayer sessions, and arrested and jailed some of the group's members.
The Government at times restricts freedom of movement and withholds the
granting of passports for foreign travel. Domestic violence and
discrimination against women are common. Teenage prostitution is a
problem in urban centers. Berbers face cultural marginalization, and
continue to press the Government to preserve their language and culture.
Unions are subject to government interference, child labor also is a
problem, and the Government has not acted to end the plight of young girls
who are subjected to exploitative and abusive domestic servitude.
However, there was further progress on some important
human rights issues during the year. In February and August, the
courts sentenced to prison terms five members of the security forces who
were convicted for their involvement in the beating deaths of prisoners.
In order to implement reforms enacted into law in 1999, the National Prison
Administration initiated a series of activities to improve living
conditions inside prisons, including the construction of family visitation
centers, manual skills training facilities, and visits by various
entertainers. In July the Royal Arbitration Commission that the King
established in 1999 to indemnify former political prisoners and their
families, released an initial grant of compensation totaling approximately
$14 million (140 million dirhams), which benefited 68 victims or their
families; some of the grant money went to Sahrawis from the Western Sahara
who were in need of urgent provisional financial and medical aid. The
July compensation also supplemented an initial Government allotment to the
commission of roughly $4 million (40 million dirhams) in April that went to
meet the urgent medical needs of 39 former prisoners and their survivors.
The Government continued to clear a backlog of unenforced legal judgments
from previous years. In May the Government allowed Islamist dissident
Sheik Abdessalam Yassine to leave his home after 11 years of house arrest
for refusing to acknowledge the religious authority of then-King Hassan II.
The Constitutional Council overturned a number of election results
considered fraudulent from the 1997 legislative elections, as well as
results from a by-election held in June. The King appointed the
Monarchy's first female royal counselor in March and confirmed the
appointment of the first female minister in September. In May the
Government accorded "public utility" status, which confers
organizations with financial benefits as recognition of their serving the
public interest, to two of the country's leading human rights
organizations, the Moroccan Association for Human Rights (AMDH) and the
Moroccan Organization for Human Rights (OMDH). In October the
Government permitted an organization of former political detainees, as well
as hundreds of human rights activists, to travel to and hold a remembrance
ceremony at the notorious former secret detention center of Tazmamart,
whose existence the authorities formerly denied. Throughout the year,
the Human Rights Ministry held numerous human-rights-awareness training
sessions with teachers and some police personnel, and the Government
increased its efforts to introduce human rights as a core subject of the
national school curriculum. In September the Government hosted a
human rights training seminar for representatives of Arab governments and
nongovernmental organizations (NGO's) in the Arab world. During her
visit in April to attend an international conference on national human
rights institutions and open a U.N.-sponsored human rights information
center, U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Mary Robinson said that
while there were still problems to resolve, the country had achieved
"significant progress" in human rights over the past 2 years.
In January the Human Rights Ministry announced an agreement with the
Moroccan Barristers Association to open a network of legal support centers
for victims of domestic violence.
RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
Section 1 Respect for the Integrity of the Person,
Including Freedom From:
a. Political and Other Extrajudicial Killing
There were no reports of political killings.
According to a report in the February newsletter of the AMDH, Ali Akzkane
died on January 4 under suspicious circumstances, while in police custody
in the southern town of Tiznit, after being apprehended during an attempted
robbery. In response to a January 13 newspaper article that called
attention to the AMDH's report and its request for a government
investigation, the Inspector General of the National Security Police in
early March denied accusations of police malfeasance in the death.
According to the Inspector General, Akzkane committed suicide in his jail
cell 2 hours after being incarcerated, and authorities immediately notified
the public prosecutor and regional doctor. An investigation ensued
and, according to the Inspector General, discussions with Akzkane's family
revealed that he had been suffering from depression. Results of the
autopsy reportedly attributed Akzkane's death to suicide. According
to the AMDH, it was contacted by the Government regarding the affair in
September and told that the authorities were reviewing the case.
There were no results in the investigation by year's end (see Section
1.c.).
The AMDH's bureau in Taounate (outside of Fez) reported
suspicious circumstances in the death of Mustapha Najiaji, after a Royal
Armed Forces patrol took him and another citizen into custody at 2 a.m. on
July 12; the press reported that security forces detained the two for
public drunkenness and possession of illegal narcotics. According to
the second citizen, the patrol took him and Najiaji to a "bechouia"
(an administrative center under the jurisdiction of the Interior Ministry
that contains holding cells) and beat them until 3 a.m. The security
forces subsequently freed the second citizen after Najiaji fell down, lost
consciousness, and stopped breathing. According to the AMDH report,
at 4 a.m. the security forces at the bechouia notified the public
prosecutor that they had found Najiaji dead in his cell from a suicide by
hanging. The second citizen reportedly alleged in his testimony to
the public prosecutor that Najiaji died from beatings at the hands of the
security forces. According to the AMDH, the prosecutor general of Fez
orally transmitted the autopsy results to Najiaji's family, and the
family's lawyer reportedly had access to the results; the results
reportedly made reference to Najiaji having been the victim of violence
before his death. The AMDH expressed concern over the slow handling
of the case, which reportedly was pending with the general prosecutor at
the military court in Rabat at year's end. The Royal Armed Forces
patrol members involved in the case were not yet charged by year's end (see
Section 1.c.).
On November 27, security forces reportedly used violent
means to break up a 5-day sit-in strike at a canning factory in the
southern city of Agadir. The attack reportedly resulted in the death
of one worker and injuries to eight others. Conflicting reports
attributed the death to either police abuse or "natural causes"
(see Sections 1.c., 1.d., 2.b., and 6.a.).
In their annual human rights report for 1999, which was
released in late January, the AMDH called on the Government "to
resolve definitively and urgently the issue of deaths inside and outside
police stations and posts of the Gendarmerie."
A police officer and two members of the Interior
Ministry's auxiliary forces were arrested in connection with the beating
death of Farah Mohammed near Oujda in August 1999. The public
prosecutor at Oudja's court of appeal subsequently ordered an
investigation. Farah Mohammed was stopped by police authorities for
questioning in connection with contraband trafficking of fuel across the
Moroccan border with Algeria. Eyewitnesses said that the police beat
and kicked him into unconsciousness at the time he was detained. He
died in police custody. Farah Mohammed's parents lodged an immediate
complaint with gendarmerie authorities as soon as they learned of their
son's death, which led to the immediate arrest of the police and military
auxiliary officers allegedly involved in the beating. The trial in
the case still reportedly was pending at year's end.
In August an appeals court in Settat (south of
Casablanca) convicted an auxiliary member of the security forces to 12
years' imprisonment and a fine of approximately $6,000 (60,000 dirhams) for
the beating death of mint vendor Abdelaziz Warret in June 1999. Two
other auxiliary members of the security forces involved in the beating
death were sentenced to 4 months in prison. According to press
reports in June 1999, police in Berrechid arrested Warret, confiscated his
merchandise, and beat him until he fainted. He died later at a
hospital. When his family went to claim the body and to obtain a
death certificate, doctors refused to issue one. No explanation was
given for his arrest. An autopsy subsequently performed during the
investigation into Warret's death revealed that he died from internal
hemorrhaging caused by the beating.
In February a court in Tangiers convicted two police
officers of manslaughter in the 1996 beating death of a citizen returning
from Holland. According to reports of witnesses, port police stopped
Mohamed El-Feddaoui in Tangiers as he disembarked from a car ferry in his
automobile. The witnesses claim that El-Feddaoui subsequently was
taken to the police station and tortured to death by two police officers.
The two officers reportedly had been instructed by the port's police
commissioner to detain and torture Feddaoui. Both of the police
officers received 10 years' imprisonment for violence resulting in
manslaughter. The court sentenced the port police commissioner to 8
years' imprisonment for abusive detention and denial of his complicity in
the crime. The court also ordered all three to pay approximately
$35,000 (350,000 dirhams) each to Feddaoui's estate. According to
press reports, the AMDH principally was responsible for furnishing
testimony in the case (see Section 1.c.).
In September the court of appeal in Safi (south of
Casablanca) resumed a long-delayed case and summoned three police officers
charged with manslaughter in the 1996 death of Hassan Mernissi.
According to Mernissi's family, he was killed by the three police officers
while in incommunicado ("garde-a-vue") detention in Safi's
central police station. Police reportedly had stopped Mernissi for
drunkenness. According to a lawyer representing Mernissi's family,
witnesses present in the police station at the time alleged that Mernissi
was beaten to death while in detention. The police officers
maintained that the allegedly drunk Mernissi knocked his head against the
bars of his cell until he died. The autopsy indicated that Mernissi
bled to death. Before the case was heard by court of appeal in Safi
in early 1999, it remained in the pretrial investigation stage for over 2
years. In consideration of the Ramadan holiday, in December the trial
was postponed again until March 2001.
Human rights groups allege that poor medical care in
prisons results in unnecessary deaths; however, the Justice Ministry in
1999 assigned more doctors to prisons in an effort to improve prison health
facilities. However, resource constraints continue to contribute to
harsh conditions, including extreme overcrowding, malnutrition, and lack of
hygiene. Throughout the year, the National Prison Administration
continued to allow numerous site visits by members of Parliament, the
press, human rights groups, and foreign diplomats (see Section 1.c.).
b. Disappearance
There were no new cases of confirmed disappearance for
the fifth consecutive year; however, the AMDH claimed during the year that
the continued practice of incommunicado detention without informing the
family members of those detained (see Section 1.d.) was evidence of the
continued practice of forced disappearance. While the forced
disappearance of individuals who opposed the Government and its policies
occurred over several decades, the Youssoufi Government, upon taking
office, pledged that such policies would not recur, and that it would
disclose as much information as possible on past cases. Many of those
who disappeared were members of the military who were implicated in
attempts to overthrow the Government in 1971 and 1972. Others were
Sahrawis or Moroccans who challenged the Government's claim to the Western
Sahara or other government policies. Many of those who disappeared
were held in secret detention camps. While the Government in recent
years quietly released several hundred persons who had disappeared,
including a release of about 300 such detainees in June 1991, and although
in October 1998 it issued an announcement on those who disappeared, to this
day hundreds of Saharan and Moroccan families do not have any information
about their missing relatives, many of whom disappeared over 20 years ago.
No explanation for their incarceration has ever been provided. Local
human rights monitors have concluded that many others died while at the
notorious Tazmamart prison, which the Government since has closed.
The Government has acknowledged 34 of these deaths and has provided death
certificates to the families of all but 1 of the 34 who died.
In October 1998, in response to a directive issued by
then-King Hassan II that all human rights cases be resolved "within 6
months," the Royal Consultative Council on Human Rights (CCDH)
announced the release of information on 112 cases of disappearances.
According to the Council, 56 of the 112 who disappeared were deceased;
family members of 33 of the deceased received death certificates from the
Government. The Council added that eight persons believed to have
disappeared were alive and living abroad, and that four were alive and in
Morocco. Of the remaining 44, the Council stated that it had no
further information. Human rights groups and families pointed out
discrepancies between their lists and those of the Government, asked the
Government for more data regarding these cases, and demanded full
explanations of the causes and circumstances of these deaths and disclosure
of the identities of those responsible. Some family groups claim that
the Government is not divulging details on at least 50 more cases. In
November 1998, the Council began meetings in various provinces with groups
representing families of persons who had disappeared in order to collect
data on their grievances and to conduct further research into the fate of
those who remain missing. In April 1999, the Council announced that
it would indemnify the 112 victims of politically motivated disappearances.
Human rights NGO's disputed the Council's findings, claiming that they had
compiled a list of over 600 potential cases of such disappearances from the
1960's through the 1980's. The NGO's called for the immediate release
of all remaining political prisoners, disclosure of the fate of those whose
cases the Council did not examine, delivery of the remains of the deceased
to their families, compensation for victims and their families, and
punishment for those responsible. On July 17, the Paris-based
International Federation of Human Rights Leagues (FIDH) published a
communique in which it estimated the number of persons who had disappeared
in Morocco alone to be "between nearly 600 and several thousand."
The FIDH claimed that disappearances of Sahrawis in the Western Sahara
could number up to 1,500, although conditions in the territory prevented
full confirmation of this figure. In October the Government for the
first time permitted an organization of former political detainees, as well
as hundreds of human rights activists, to travel to and hold a remembrance
ceremony at the notorious former secret detention center at Tazmamart,
whose existence the authorities formerly denied (see Section 2.a.).
In August 1999, in one of his first official acts, King
Mohammed VI established a new royal commission responsible for increasing
the Government's efforts to resolve the issue of those who had disappeared
and to reach an accommodation with former political prisoners and members
of their families. The new commission met with some family members
and local human rights organizations and began to draw up guidelines for
the resolution of issues involving individuals who had disappeared.
Following up on the CCDH'S December 1999 announcement to
distribute advance partial compensation to the neediest victims of forced
disappearance and arbitrary detention, Prime Minister Youssoufi declared
before Parliament in January that his government would compensate
financially the most urgent cases first. Youssoufi's announcement
came after the passing of the Government's January 1 deadline for receipt
of compensation claims from former detainees and their survivors by the
Royal Arbitration Commission working under the auspices of the CCDH.
The number of claims filed totaled approximately 5,900. Human rights
organizations contested the nature of the compensation process,
particularly the composition of the Arbitration Commission, which they
claimed lacked independence; the lack of transparency in the commission's
decision-making processes; and the condition imposed by the commission that
those filing claims must accept the commission's findings as final, without
appeal. In April the CCDH announced the Government's allocation of a
provisional compensation fund totaling approximately $4 million (40 million
dirhams), as well as initial provisional compensation for 31 of the
neediest former prisoners who had been held in the notorious Tazmamart
prison, and 8 of the prisoners' surviving family members. Each
prisoner or surviving family member received up to approximately $14,500
(145,000 dirhams), a sum designed to cover urgent medical and financial
expenses caused by extended imprisonment. In July the Royal
Arbitration Commission announced final compensation settlements for 68
cases (benefiting 354 persons, including some of those provisionally
compensated in April) that totaled approximately $14 million (140 million
dirhams). Former prisoners or their survivors were designated to
receive between $25,000 and $350,000 (250,000 and 3,500,000 dirhams).
In July the Arbitration Commission began distributing preliminary
compensation payments to some of the Sahrawis from the Western Sahara who
had disappeared or been detained, and their family members. As with
the April allotment, the Government stated that it intended these initial
payments as provisional compensation to cover urgent medical and financial
expenses for needy Sahrawis or their surviving family members who appealed
for compensation from the Commission by December 31, 1999. The
Government announced that additional compensation in the form of final
settlements could be distributed pending the review by the Commission of
petitions submitted by Sahrawi claimants. Critics of the arbitration
process continued to criticize the Commission, claiming that its
composition lacked independence and that the Commission's stipulation that
all of its decisions were final was unfair. Numerous former prisoners
and their survivors refused to file a claim. Others criticized the
small number of cases settled, citing that over 5,800 cases remained.
In the absence of disclosure by the Government explaining its role in past
disappearances, the Moroccan Forum for Truth and Justice (FMVE--created by
victims of forced disappearance and their surviving family members)
continued to argue that the compensation process alone was inadequate to
redress past government actions; it requested the Government to go beyond
compensation to facilitate conciliation between citizens and the Government
through publicized investigations into disappearances and arbitrary
detentions. After the July compensation settlement was announced, the
OMDH issued a communique calling for more transparency during the
arbitration process. According to the OMDH, "the fact of not
communicating these measures at the opportune time, even though the
measures were limited, helped sow ambiguity and misinformation, which the
issue could have done without." In speeches given in July and
December, King Mohammed VI addressed criticisms of the compensation process
by announcing imminent reform of the CCDH. According to the King, the
CCDH's composition, responsibilities, and work structure would be changed.
None of the King's proposed changes had been implemented by year's end.
There were no developments in the disappearance of
Abdullah Sherrouq, a student who reportedly was detained by security
services on June 22, 1981. After 19 years, his family has been unable
to learn anything of his whereabouts or his fate, despite appeals by
Amnesty International (AI). In 1998 the CCDH listed Sherrouq as 1 of
the 112 cases of disappearance acknowledged by the Government; according to
the council, Sherrouq disappeared in undetermined circumstances; he was 1
of the 44 for whom the Government said it possessed no further information.
Associations that seek information on those who have
disappeared, including the FMVE, an executive coordinating committee of
former Sahrawi political prisoners, and a group specifically representing
Tazmamart prison survivors, operate openly, and call upon the Government
for full disclosure of events surrounding cases that date back to the
1960's. Several front-page articles in newspapers affiliated with
parties in the governing coalition called at various times during the year
for full disclosure on all outstanding cases of disappearance. The
associations also call for compensation to families of those who have
disappeared, death certificates and the return of the remains of those who
died, and prosecution of responsible officials. The Government has
indicated that it would be more open about providing information on these
past cases, and met with the FMVE on a number of occasions during the year
to discuss its concerns. Throughout the year, FMVE leaders also met
with the CCDH and leaders of national political parties. However,
according to press reports in August, the FMVE'S leadership claimed that
political parties were hesitant to help them address the problem of past
disappearances. Associations in the Western Sahara that seek
information on disappearances do not operate free from government
interference; there were reports that some members of these associations
were harassed and intimidated while seeking information on missing Sahrawis.
Some also continue to be denied passports (see Section 2.d.).
Until July the Government paid a monthly stipend of $500
(5,000 dirhams) to 28 former prisoners who survived 18 to 20 years in
solitary confinement under harsh conditions at Tazmamart prison in
connection with the coup attempts in 1971 and 1972. After their
release, the Government prohibited them from speaking out publicly about
their detention. In exchange the Government gave the former prisoners
assurances that it would help them find jobs and reintegrate them into
society; however, none of them has obtained government assistance in this
regard, and some complain of being denied voter cards and passports.
After the final compensation settlement package from the Royal Arbitration
Commission to the 31 former Tazmamart prisoners in July, the authorities
ceased distributing the monthly stipends to the 28 who had been kept in
solitary confinement.
c. Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading
Treatment or Punishment
The law prohibits torture, and the Government claims
that the use of torture has been discontinued; however, some members of the
security forces still torture or otherwise abuse detainees. The Penal
Code requires capital punishment for perpetrators who commit acts of
torture or "acts of barbarity," provided that such acts occur
during the commission of a crime. The Penal Code also stipulates
sentences up to life imprisonment for public servants who "use or
oblige the use of violence" against others in the exercise of their
functions. By law, pretrial investigating judges must, if asked to do
so or if they themselves notice physical marks that so warrant, refer the
detained person to an expert doctor. However, according to legal
experts, this obligation often is ignored in practice.
In February the AMDH reported the death under suspicious
circumstances of Ali Akzkane while he was in police custody in Tiznit on
January 4 after being apprehended during an attempted robbery. In
response to the AMDH's request for a government investigation, the National
Security Police denied accusations of malfeasance in Akzkane's death, and
attributed his death to suicide likely brought on by depression.
Results of an autopsy reportedly attributed Akzkane's death to suicide.
According to the AMDH, which was contacted by the Government regarding the
affair in September, the authorities were reviewing the case at year's end
(see Section 1.a).
In April a Moroccan court in the Western Sahara city of
Laayoune sentenced five Sahrawi youths to prison terms of between 5 and 10
years for the "formation of a criminal association" after their
alleged participation in a March 4 stone-throwing in the same city.
One of the lawyers representing the five Sahrawis alleged that the judicial
police who investigated the affair committed several illegal acts,
including torturing the youths during their detention (see Sections 1.d.,
1.e., and 1.f.).
After his release from prison on May 4 after a royal pardon, Sadok El-Kihal,
a trucker and regional bureau member of the Istiqlal party's General Union
of Moroccan Workers (UGTM), contacted the AMDH with accusations that he had
been arrested arbitrarily, jailed, tortured, and falsely convicted by
authorities in June 1999 following his participation in a national truckers
strike. El-Kihal alleged that security forces in the Gendarmerie of
Taouriate (Oujda province) tortured him for almost 24 hours, suspending him
by his arms for extended periods while beating his fingers and feet.
El-Kihal also alleged to AMDH that members of the Gendarmerie tied his
hands behind his back, bent him backward on his knees, and applied pressure
to his stomach while somebody forced their fingers down his throat.
El-Kihal alleged that two adjutants in the Gendarmerie participated in his
torture. El-Kihal said that his jailers wrote a false police report,
which they forced him to endorse with his thumbprint without first allowing
him to read it. El-Kihal alleged that it was this police report that
formed the basis of his conviction at the Oujda court of appeals, which
sentenced him to 2 years' imprisonment. The Istiqlal party's
Arabic-language daily, Al-Alam, published a UGTM communique on September
30, 1999, regarding El-Kihal's treatment. El-Kihal subsequently
benefited from a royal pardon and was freed on May 4 (see Sections 1.d.,
1.e., and 6.a.).
In June a foreign diplomat met with a Sahrawi student,
who claimed to have been tortured by the authorities for suspected
participation in May 17 to 18 demonstrations near the Marrakech University
campus. There were conflicting accounts regarding the origins of the
large-scale demonstrations, during which mostly Sahrawi students clashed
with dozens of Marrakech police in violent exchanges that involved the
throwing of a Molotov cocktail by one student and the clubbing of students
by security forces. During the detention, police allegedly attempted
to force the student to inform on other Sahrawi students who had
participated in the demonstrations. During the meeting, the student
showed the foreign diplomat fresh burn marks that the police allegedly
inflicted with cigarettes (see Sections 1.d. and 1.e).
On May 17 in Rabat, police arrested 14 students at
Mohammed V University and charged them with arson, violence against the
police, erecting barricades, and impeding free movement. The
students, 12 of whom were Sahrawis, participated earlier in the day in a
solidarity protest with fellow Sahrawi students who were arrested the same
morning in Marrakech. According to a lawyer representing 13 of the
accused students, one of his clients claimed that police took him to an
unidentified location after his arrest, beat him severely, and interrogated
him regarding his activities and links with other Sahrawis and human rights
activists. Indicating his client's difficulty in speaking in court,
as well as his swollen face and eyes, the lawyer requested the pretrial
investigating judge to conduct a medical examination of his client, which
the judge refused. After a series of hearings and delays, on November
17, the Rabat court of appeals acquitted and freed all 14 students who were
detained in mid-May. According to a lawyer for the defense, all of
the detained students denied before the court any involvement in the
demonstration. The prosecution reportedly failed to produce any
witnesses who could confirm the students' participation in the May 17
incident (see Section 1.e.).
The AMDH's bureau in Taounate (outside of Fez) reported
suspicious circumstances in the death of Mustapha Najiaji after a Royal
Armed Forces patrol reportedly took him and another citizen into custody on
July 12; press reports stated that security forces detained the two for
public drunkenness and possession of illicit narcotics. According to
the AMDH report, the second citizen claimed that the patrol beat Najiaji to
death while the security forces claim that they found Najiaji dead in his
cell from suicide by hanging. The AMDH reported that the prosecutor
general of Fez orally transmitted the autopsy results to Najiaji's family
and that the family's lawyer had access to the results; the results
reportedly made reference to Najiaji having been the victim of violence
before his death. The AMDH expressed concern over the slow handling
of the case; it reportedly was pending with the general prosecutor at the
military court in Rabat at year's end, and the Royal Armed Forces patrol
members have yet to be charged (see Section 1.a.).
In August the media reported a case of alleged torture
by police in a Casablanca police station. Abderrahmane Jamali alleged
that police officers in the Ain Sebaa-Hay Al-Hassani station tortured him
for 3 days while he was detained in early August, once in the presence of a
citizen who had filed a complaint against him. Press reports alleged
that the incident began in late July when the plaintiff twice filed a
complaint against Jamali for abuse of confidence and theft. After the
prosecutor dismissed the first complaint for lack of proof, the plaintiff
requested a reopening and more thorough investigation of the case.
Press reports alleged that Jamali subsequently was detained, tortured for 3
days, and then convicted and sentenced by a Casablanca court to 5 months'
imprisonment several days later. Jamali reportedly fainted during the
sentencing hearing. Jamali became ill within days of his
incarceration and, after his family sent a letter to the prison director
requesting the director's intervention, was sent to various medical
facilities. At Averroes hospital, doctors on August 11 detected an
infection allegedly transmitted by parasites found on rodents.
According to the Party of Progress and Socialism's French-language daily
newspaper Al-Bayane, doctors also found signs of "physical
cruelty" on Jamali's body. The marks reportedly included
contusions and bruises on his neck and knees, as well as a lesion on one of
his lungs. A doctor at Averroes wrote a letter to Al-Bayane claiming
that the infection Jamali contracted "does not explain all of the
signs that we observed during (his) clinical examination."
Afterwards, Jamali filed complaints against three agents of the judicial
police for torture; the Casablanca police department issued a communique on
August 18 stating that it had opened an investigation into the charges of
torture. Some newspapers called for an investigation into the court
of first instance's handling of the case because the judge and prosecutor
allegedly failed to inquire into the detainee's fragile state of health, as
required by law.
In September the media reported on two cases of alleged
torture by a deputy officer from the Royal Gendarmerie brigade in Zaio, in
the northeastern part of the country. According to the reports, the
officer tortured two persons in order to extort money from their family and
friends. In one of the cases, a cafe owner alleged that in September
the officer slapped him in front of his customers, used force to remove him
from his establishment, and subjected him to various forms of torture at
brigade headquarters. In the second case, an elderly woman brought
suit against the same officer for torturing her son and extorting
approximately $500 (5,000 dirhams) from her to stop the torture.
After he was informed of the cases, Zaio's municipal president (who also is
a Member of Parliament) reportedly referred the cases immediately to the
national authorities. An investigation into the alleged torture was
ongoing at year's end.
At the October 27 trial of 10 students at the University
of Hassan I in Settat, each of the students reportedly declared before the
Settat court of first instance that they were forced under duress and
torture to sign (by thumb prints) their police statements. According
to a communique from the Party of Progress and Socialism (PPS) political
party, two of its members who were involved in the incident "were
victims of grave physical cruelty" during their transfer to the police
station and during their detention (see Sections 1.e. and 2.b.).
The OMDH filed a complaint on behalf of some of those
who were detained and abused by the police at the end of September 1999,
following several days of protests over a variety of social grievances in
Laayoune in the Western Sahara (see Sections 1.d., 1.e., 1.f., and 2.b.).
There was photographic and other evidence to substantiate claims that the
police systematically had beaten some of the persons they had detained in
connection with the protests. An investigation was opened into the
charges; however, after almost 15 months no police officials have been
charged in connection with the force used to break up the protests, nor for
the beatings inflicted on some of those detained by the police. (Some
police officials allegedly responsible subsequently were transferred in
1999 and the chief of police in Laayoune was relieved of his duties there.)
In its 2000 annual international human rights report
released in June, Amnesty International acknowledged that security forces
involved in several cases of torture had been arrested and prosecuted.
However, the organization noted that "in the majority of cases,
investigations were either not opened into complaints and allegations of
torture ... or were opened but dismissed without adequate
investigation."
Frustrated by what it perceived to be the Interior
Ministry's slow implementation of measures to ensure a more humane
Government with greater transparency, which were urged by King Mohammed VI
in 1999, the OMDH in February publicized a memorandum it sent to Interior
Minister Ahmed Midaoui in January calling for a dialog between Midaoui's
ministry and human rights organizations. The OMDH appealed to the
Interior Minister to implement a series of proposed measures, including
measures reinforcing individual protections against torture through the
full implementation of the Convention Against Torture and other Cruel,
Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, destroying police files on
former political prisoners or exiles, and ending illegal punitive detention
measures by local authorities.
In 1999 the OMDH published a special newspaper in which it called on the
Government to implement legislation that would criminalize the use of
torture and would control the conditions under which detainees are kept in
garde-a-vue detention and in prisons. The OMDH claimed that most
cases of torture submitted to the justice system involved incidents that
occurred in front of witnesses or in public areas. According to the
OMDH, torture in detention largely continues to escape the notice of the
judiciary. The OMDH noted that the implementation of judges'
instructions on eliminating the use of torture has been "exceedingly
slow." While the OMDH admitted that the use of torture has
diminished over the years, it claimed that it has not disappeared.
The OMDH alleged in its report that those who commit such abuses "do
so with impunity in almost all cases." The NGO called on the
Government to harmonize domestic law with its responsibilities under the
U.N. Convention Against Torture, to ensure full independence for the
judiciary, and to punish those who resort to torture.
In February Human Rights Minister Mohammed Aujjar
announced plans by the newly formed NGO Association for the Rehabilitation
of Torture Victims (ARVT) to open a rehabilitation center in Casablanca
designed to assist former torture victims in overcoming torture-related
trauma. At an inaugural event, Prime Minister Youssoufi said that the
center constituted a new milestone in the consolidation of the rule of law.
Also in February, Mohammed Kholti, a retired secret
police officer who tortured political dissidents during the 1970's and
1980's publicly asked for forgiveness in a letter sent to two national
newspapers, which published his plea. Kholti's act marked the first
time that a former member of the security forces had admitted to past use
of torture.
In April Reuter's news services reported the lifting of
a 13-year ban on a book that described harsh conditions in a high security
prison. According to author Abdelkader Chaoui, his book, "The
Unachieved Past," had been banned since its publication in 1987.
The book describes the harsh conditions in the Kenitra prison, in which the
author was held for 15 years. Chaoui was jailed in 1974 because of
his leftist political opinions and leadership role in a Marxist-Leninist
organization. In November in Marrakesh, King Mohammed awarded Chaoui
a literary prize for his most recent novel (see Section 2.a.).
In May the Government permitted the local publication
and sale of a comic book called "They Even Starve Rats."
Written and illustrated by Abdelaziz Mouride, a leftist student whom the
authorities arbitrarily detained in 1974, sentenced to 22 years in prison,
and then freed in 1984, the comic book recounts in vivid detail the
torture, injustice, and humiliation that the author and other political
dissidents suffered at the hands of the authorities. Using the third
person to narrate his experience, Mouride depicts the manner in which the
authorities kidnaped dissidents, tortured them in secret detention centers,
staged sham trials, and then incarcerated them in remote prisons, where
some lost their sanity or died. Mouride secretly was able to send out
drawings of his ordeals with visiting friends and relatives. Mouride
said that human rights organizations played the principal role in securing
his freedom in 1984 (see Section 2.a.).
Also in May, a delegation from the International Center
for the Rehabilitation of Torture Victims visited the country to discuss
the Government's compliance with the U.N. Convention Against Torture.
The delegation told Human Rights Minister Aujjar that it sought to hold its
next world congress in Morocco.
In an October 23 "Open Letter to the Minister of
Justice" that it distributed to domestic as well as international
media, the AMDH for the first time published a list containing 14 names of
alleged former torturers and officials involved in disappearances and
arbitrary detention. The first domestic newspaper to republish the
list was Le Journal. Some of the listed names were high-ranking
officials currently holding office, including the head of the Royal
Gendarmerie and secret services. Former Interior Minister Driss
Basri's name also was included in the list. In the letter, the AMDH
called for "the truth and pursuit of those responsible for
disappearances." The AMDH also criticized the Justice Ministry
for its alleged nonintervention in past cases of torture and disappearance
(see Section 2.a.).
In 1998 the Ministry of Justice and the prison
administration implemented a law that makes autopsies routine for any death
that occurs in detention, in order to allow allegations of torture to be
evaluated. The autopsies take place at the request of the family,
human rights NGO's, or the state prosecutor, and at the order of a judge.
Autopsies were used to prove allegations of abuse in at least two cases
during the year.
In incidents throughout the year, police continued to
use force to disperse several demonstrations by unemployed university
graduates associated with the National Association of Unemployed Graduates
(known by its French acronym, ANDC), an organization not recognized by the
Government, and "Group 314" (a separate organization of
unemployed state doctoral graduates of medicine and engineering), and other
groups to a lesser extent. In numerous incidents throughout the
country during the year, police beat demonstrators with batons in order to
disperse them (see Sections 1.d., 1.e., and 2.b.). On February 2, in
the village of Tarmilet, security forces used force, including rubber
bullets, tear gas, and water cannons, to remove striking workers who had
blockaded a water-bottling factory to protest lay-offs (see Sections 1.d.,
1.f., 2.b., 2.d., and 6.a.). On June 18 in Rabat, security forces
again resorted to force, using batons and tear gas to disperse ANDC
demonstrators and to remove Group 314 hunger strikers from the local
headquarters of an independent national union (see Sections 1.d., 1.e., and
2.b.). On July 26 and again on September 12, police violently
dispersed disabled, unemployed university graduates who were protesting the
denial of their right to employment (see Sections 2.a., 2.b., and 5).
On October 8 in Casablanca, police dispersed with tear gas 2,000 to 3,000
Islamists who were protesting the Israeli Government's actions against
Palestinians in Israel, the West Bank, and Gaza in the fall (see Section
2.b.). On October 23, security forces used violent means to break up
a demonstration by students who were preparing to begin a march to protest
transportation problems at Hassan I University in Settat (see Sections 1.e.
and 2.b.). There were reports in the fall of violent clashes at
university campuses around the county between security forces and JCO
students engaged in student elections (see Sections 1.e. and 2.b.).
On November 27, security forces reportedly used violent means to break up a
5-day sit-in strike at a canning factory in the southern city of Agadir.
The attack reportedly resulted in the death of one worker and injuries to
eight others (see Sections 1.a., 1.d., 2.b., and 6.a.). During the
weekend of December 9 to 11, security forces throughout the country used
violent means to disperse human rights activists, members of the JCO, and
unemployed graduates who separately gathered in Rabat and other large
cities to demonstrate for different reasons (see Sections 1.d., 1.e., 2.a.,
2.b., and 4).
In February a Tangiers court convicted two police
officers of manslaughter in the 1996 beating death of Mohamed El-Feddaoui
at the port of Tangiers, when the El-Feddaoui was returning from Holland.
Both police officers received 10-year jail terms for violence resulting in
manslaughter. The port police commissioner was sentenced to 8 years'
imprisonment for abusive detention and denial of complicity in the crime
(see Section 1.a.).
Prison conditions remain harsh; however, they have
improved in recent years, due in part to reforms undertaken at the
suggestion of the CCDH and the Minister of Justice, and to more
transparency in the functioning of the National Prison Administration.
In August 1999, the Government enacted new legislation designed to reform
the prison system. The new legislation replaced a royal decree that
had governed the prison system since 1915. Among the reforms in the
legislation were provisions mandating compensation for work performed by
prisoners. Prisoners with "good conduct" records also were
accorded the right to a furlough to visit family members during important
holiday periods. The new legislation outlawed the use of handcuffs,
manacles, or other devices used for physical restraint, except as required
to restrain violent prisoners and then only after consultation with prison
medical authorities. Procedures were established to allow the prisons
to be inspected by the press and human rights organizations, and members of
both the press and human rights organizations visited prisons after the
procedures were established. Visitors must receive authorization from
the Director of the Prison Administration to conduct prison visits.
Special provisions also accorded women the right to keep their children
with them in prison until the children reach the age of 2 or longer with
special permission from the Ministry of Justice. The new law
contained provisions that extended the function of the prison system beyond
that of punishment and incarceration to include rehabilitation and
preparation for a return to society.
Nonetheless, credible reports indicate that harsh
treatment and conditions continue, often as a result of chronic
overcrowding. Despite being designed to hold 4,000 inmates, Oukacha
Central Prison in Casablanca currently holds more than 7,000 prisoners.
Human rights groups allege that poor medical care in prisons results in
unnecessary deaths. To address this problem, the Government provided
special funds in the 1998-99 budget for the renovation of prison
facilities, and added doctors and health facilities to prisons. In
addition to extreme overcrowding, malnutrition and lack of hygiene continue
to aggravate the poor health conditions inside prisons (see Section 1.a.).
Press reports during the year called attention to the
extremely harsh conditions inside the detention center of Ain Atiq outside
of Rabat. While Ain Atiq's status as a detention or social center is
not defined clearly, it often receives homeless, vagrant, and mentally
disabled persons, in addition to juvenile delinquents. Negligence at
Ain Atiq reportedly has led to serious problems, such as hygienic and
nutritional deficiencies, and harsh general living conditions. The
center also is reportedly underequipped and understaffed to provide
adequate medical care. The AMDH reportedly is planning a study of the
center in the hopes of encouraging improvements. During the year, the
authorities used Ain Atiq to detain various demonstrators picked up during
protests. In June, July, and September security forces forcibly
dispersed unemployed, disabled protesters in downtown Rabat and reportedly
took them to Ain Atiq, where some allegedly remained for over a month (see
Sections 2.b. and 5). In the past, human rights organizations have
called for Ain Atiq's closure, as well as of other similar centers.
Some press reports during the year also raised the
problem of drug trafficking and sexual abuse in prisons among inmates.
The presence of cannabis is widely recognized as a problem, as is sexual
abuse of inmates. In May prisoners in the Touchka prison at
Errachidia allegedly rioted to protest against, among other problems,
sexual abuse among inmates. Press reports during the year also raised
the issue of some prisoners being allowed to pay for the right to occupy
their own cells.
In the first visit of its kind, Members of Parliament
visited Sale prison in February 1999 to investigate prison conditions and
allegations of overcrowding. Their visit followed that of the 2M
television station, which broadcast an exclusive report on prisons in
January 1999.
Although the Government generally did not permit prison
visits by human rights monitors in the past, since the tenure of the
Youssoufi Government began there has been close collaboration between the
Justice Ministry, the National Prison Administration, and human rights
groups on prison visits, which now are authorized explicitly by law.
Throughout the year, the National Prison Administration continued to allow
numerous site visits by Parliament, the press, human rights groups, and
foreign diplomats. The National Observatory of Moroccan Prisons (ONPM)
made over 15 visits during the year, taking extensive notes of the numerous
problems facing the prison system and recounting these in the press.
In addition to noting the harsh conditions caused by chronic overcrowding
(some estimates place the current inmate population at as high as 52,000),
the ONPM recommended that some of the existing deteriorated penitentiaries
dating from the 1920's be replaced or renovated. According to Mohamed
Lididi, the Administrator of the National Prison Administration, 20 smaller
prisons currently are being built to supplement and replace some of the
existing 43.
In addition to permitting an increasing number of
visits, the National Prison Administration initiated a series of activities
to improve living conditions inside prisons, including the construction of
family visitation centers, manual-skills training facilities, and prison
visits by various entertainers. Early in the year, the civilian
prison in El-Jadida (near Casablanca) was expanded, with the addition of a
professional training center and a family meeting area. The training
center provides courses and vocational studies to inmates interested in
preparing themselves for post-prison employment. The family area
allows inmates to meet directly with their family members, and is equipped
with chairs, tables, and a small cafe. Telephone booths also were
installed for use by inmates. The improvements at El-Jadida were
duplicated inside other prisons, with the Prison Administration devoting
more resources to improving living conditions and inmate rehabilitation.
The ONPM received permission to organize an evening music and dance program
for female inmates in Oukacha prison in Casablanca. In Sale prison
near Rabat, the British Embassy and the Prison Administration sponsored a
musical performance by African students. Several similar performances
and cultural seminars occurred at other prisons.
In November at Al-Akhawayn University in Ifrane, the
Justice Ministry hosted, in coordination with the Rabat-based organization
British Council and the London-based Penal Reform International, an
international seminar on reforming the prison system. The seminar was
attended by eminent international jurists and focused on identifying
constructive alternatives to incarceration. The director of the
penitentiary system participated in the seminar, speaking on the evolution
of the country's penal system. The new NGO the Moroccan Prison
Observatory participated as well.
d. Arbitrary Arrest, Detention or Exile
Police continued to use arbitrary arrest and detention.
Although legal provisions for due process have been revised extensively in
recent years, reports indicate that authorities sometimes ignore them.
Although police usually make arrests in public and during the day, they do
not always identify themselves and do not always obtain warrants.
Garde-a-vue detention is limited to 48 hours, with one 24-hour extension
allowed at the prosecutor's discretion. In state security cases, the
garde-a-vue period is 96 hours; this also may be extended by the
prosecutor. It is during this initial period, when defendants are
denied access to counsel, that the accused is interrogated and abuse or
torture is most likely to occur. Some members of the security forces,
long accustomed to indefinite precharge access to detainees, continue to
resist the new rules.
Under 1991 changes to the law, the police are obliged to
notify a person's next of kin of an arrest as soon as possible.
However, lawyers are not always informed promptly of the date of arrest,
and thus are not always able to monitor compliance with the garde-a-vue
detention limits. While the law provides for a limited system of
bail, it rarely is granted. However, defendants sometimes are
released on their own recognizance. The law does not provide for
habeas corpus or its equivalent. Under a separate code of military
justice, military authorities may detain members of the military without
warrants or public trial.
Although accused persons generally are brought to trial
within an initial period of 2 months, prosecutors may request up to five
additional 2-month extensions of pretrial detention. Thus, an accused
person may be kept in detention for up to 1 year.
During their February 2 operation to halt a strike at a
water-bottling factory in the village of Tarmilet (48 miles from the
capital), security forces reportedly arrested more than a dozen factory
workers, as well as random passersby. According to sources in the
Government, the workers and passersby later were released without charges.
The Democratic Confederation of Workers trade union, which is aligned
politically with the ruling USFP party, reported that security forces also
detained two of its regional delegates 2 weeks following the February 2
incident. According to government sources, the two officials were
freed by royal pardon on May 1 (Moroccan Labor Day) while an investigation
into the incident was still underway (see Sections 1.c., 1.f., 2.b., 2.d.,
and 6.a.).
In April a Moroccan court in the Western Sahara city of
Laayoune sentenced five Sahrawi youths to prison terms of between 5 and 10
years for the "formation of a criminal association" after their
alleged participation in a March 4 stone-throwing incident in the city.
One of the lawyers who represented the five Sahrawis alleged that the
judicial police who investigated the affair committed several illegal acts,
including unlawfully entering the homes of the youths and detaining them,
torturing them during their detention, and forcing the youths to sign under
duress police reports, which they were not allowed to read and which they
claimed contained falsehoods. The decision was appealed to the court
of appeals in Laayoune and was reportedly before the Supreme Court in Rabat
at year's end (see Sections 1.c., 1.e., and 1.f.).
On May 3, members of the ANDC and other unemployed
persons in Meknes staged a sit-in before a local police station to protest
the situation of the unemployed and alleged favoritism in local government
hiring practices. According to press reports, city officials called
in security forces, who used force to disperse the protesters.
Twenty-eight protesters were arrested and sent before the court of first
instance on May 4. The court, without explanation, adjourned a
morning hearing and sent the 28 back to the police station; the protesters
were summoned to the court again in the afternoon, then released without
charge (see Sections 1.c. and 2.b.). In a May 17 communique, the OMDH
criticized the Government's use of violence against unemployed graduates in
various cities throughout the country, including at the Meknes sit-in.
On May 26, the court of first instance in Marrakech sentenced 13 students
to 3 years in prison for their alleged participation in demonstrations on
May 17-18 near the Marrakech University campus. The 13, 8 of whom
were Sahrawis, were convicted on charges of armed gathering, assault with
weapons, contempt of public servants exercising their duties, destruction
of public goods, and impeding free movement. Two others were
sentenced to 2 months in prison, and in June one more student was sentenced
to 5 years in prison for setting fire to a public vehicle, damaging
municipal property, and contempt of a civil servant exercising his duty.
Thirty to 40 students reportedly were detained initially by police.
Conflicting stories exist as to the origins of the
large-scale demonstrations, in which large numbers of Marrakech police
resorted to force to disperse dozens of mostly Sahrawi students, one of
whom threw a Molotov cocktail that destroyed a police car. One of the
detained students claimed to have been tortured by the authorities for
suspected participation in the demonstrations, and displayed fresh
cigarette burns to a foreign diplomat to support the allegations (see
Sections 1.c., 1.e., and 2.b.).
On June 13, police arrested two regional leaders of the
independent Moroccan Workers' Union (UMT) outside the UMT's Rabat
headquarters. Police arrested the leaders on the UMT's premises
following a demonstration downtown by thousands of unemployed graduates
associated with the ANDC (a group unaffiliated with the UMT, although some
of its members also belong to the UMT). After security forces
violently dispersed the ANDC demonstration and arrested 28 of the
protesters, many ANDC members returned to the UMT's headquarters to
regroup. Security forces then arrived, encircled the building, and
restricted access to it. When the two UMT leaders left their union's
building to observe the situation, they were taken away by police and
reportedly held overnight. Both of the leaders later were released
without charge. All 28 ANDC protesters who were arrested downtown
earlier in the day later were released without charge.
On June 18 in Rabat, security forces resorted to force,
using truncheons and tear gas to disperse ANDC demonstrators and Group 314
hunger strikers from the UMT's Rabat headquarters. Security forces
reportedly arrested up to 100 protesters. Dozens of protesters were
reported injured, some seriously. Twenty-two of those arrested were
charged with "using violence against agents of authority;" 19
received suspended sentences and 3 received 2 months' imprisonment.
Prime Minister Youssoufi convened an interministerial meeting on June 19 to
address the violence and condition of the unemployed population.
Justice Minister Azziman then met with some members of the ANDC, which
still is unrecognized by the Government. On July 5, the Group 314
hunger strikers ended their 28-day strike after a meeting with the
Government, in which both sides pledged to engage in a substantive dialog
(see Sections 1.c., 1.d., and 2.b.).
In early October, over the period of several days, the
Government accused of espionage, detained, and held under house arrest
three French television journalists from France's FR3 television station,
who were reporting on a human rights demonstration at the notorious former
secret detention center of Tazmamart (see Section 2.a.).
There were confirmed reports that police arrested 21
strikers involved in a 5-day sit-in strike at a canning factory in Agadir
on November 27. All but one of the strikers later was released.
Security forces reportedly used violent means to break up the strike, which
reportedly resulted in the death of one worker and injuries to eight others
(see Sections 1.a., 1.c., 2.b., and 6.e.).
From December 9 to 11, security forces violently
attacked human rights activists, JCO members, and unemployed graduates, who
had been demonstrating in Rabat and other large cities for different
reasons, and detained hundreds of persons. Most demonstrators were
released shortly thereafter (see Sections 1.c., 1.e., 2.a., 2.b., and 4).
Sadok El-Kihal, a trucker and regional bureau member of
the Istiqlal party's union, the UGTM, contacted the AMDH during the year
with accusations that he had been arrested arbitrarily, jailed, tortured,
and falsely convicted by authorities in June 1999, following his
participation in a national truckers strike (see Sections 1.c., 1.e., and
6.a.).
In December 1999, Moroccan security forces who
reportedly were sent from Rabat, detained one Sahrawi in the Western Sahara
city of Laayoune and two Sahrawis in the southern Moroccan cities of
Tan-Tan and Agadir. Alleged to be spies for the Polisario, the three
reportedly were held 8 days before their appearance in an Agadir court and
before their families were informed of their detention. Family
members and the AMDH criticized the nature of the arrests, claiming them to
be a violation of human rights and due process, and proof that forced
disappearances still occur in the country. In a public trial abruptly
convened on May 30 after a lengthy and largely unpublicized police
investigation, the three were convicted of threatening the internal
security of the State and sentenced to 3 to 4 years in prison. In an
appeals hearing on July 5, all three were sentenced to 4 years in prison
(see Section 1.e.). On September 27, security forces in civilian
dress detained a fourth Sahrawi at the Laayoune airport as he was about to
board a flight. In August the Sahrawi was charged before the court of
first instance in Agadir for spying for the Polisario Front and sentenced
to 4 years in prison for threatening the internal security of the state
(see Section 1.e.).
After 11 years of house arrest for refusing to
acknowledge the religious authority of then-King Hassan II, Islamist
dissident Sheikh Abdessalam Yassine was allowed to leave his Sale home on
May 16. Yassine's release came after a May 10 statement by Interior
Minister Midaoui before Parliament that Yassine "leaves and returns to
his residence as he likes." Minister Midaoui also stated that
Yassine was free to take his case to court if he felt that his rights were
being abused. In February four members of Yassine's Justice and
Charity Organization were arrested for distributing a defiant memorandum
from Yassine to King Mohammed VI. All four were charged with
"violating the sacred institution of the Monarchy;" however,
authorities later dropped the charges and released all four (see sections
2.a., 2.c., and 2.d.).
There are no known instances of forced exile.
After King Mohammed VI took the throne in July 1999, formerly exiled
political dissident Abraham Serfaty was allowed to return to the country in
September of that year. Serfaty, a member of the (now defunct)
Communist Party and a supporter of Western Saharan independence, was
expelled from the country in 1991 after having spent 17 years as a
political prisoner. In September Serfaty, a mining engineer by
profession, was appointed by King Mohammed VI as counselor to the newly
established office responsible for developing recently discovered
hydrocarbon reserves in the eastern part of the country.
e. Denial of Fair Public Trial
The Constitution provides for an independent judiciary;
although the courts historically have been and remain to some extent
subject to extrajudicial pressures, including bribery and government
influence, the Government continued to implement reforms intended to
increase judicial independence and impartiality during the year.
Despite such efforts, the Government was criticized by the Denmark-based
Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Network (EMHRN), the OMDH, and other groups
for the slow pace of judicial reform. In January the Prime Minister
announced plans to create an independent ombudsman that would investigate
citizens' complaints and protect them from abuses involving the judiciary.
The press reported in November, and the Ministry of Human Rights asserted,
that the preparation of implementing legislation for the ombudsman post was
nearing completion. According to press reports, in February Justice
Minister Azziman reacted to accusations about the slow pace of reforms by
calling upon the assistance of Supreme Court justices to increase and
quicken the investigation of judges suspected of professional malfeasance.
In March Azziman, through the High Council of the Magistrature, which often
has been criticized by human rights organizations for the nontransparent
nature of its deliberations, promoted a large number of judges whose
records were considered exemplary, and disciplined a smaller number of
judges. In November on public television Azziman reaffirmed the
Government's commitment to reforming the judiciary. In 1998 Azziman
had stated that judicial reform was his top priority, and addressed the
issue of corruption by disbarring and disciplining a number of judges.
With the encouragement of then-King Hassan II and the broad support of the
business community, the Justice Minister in 1999 oversaw the creation of a
system of commercial courts for business litigation to boost investor
confidence. In the same year, the Ministry of Justice began to
implement a 5-year reform plan that emphasized transparency,
accountability, and professionalism as top priorities. During the
past 2 years, the administrative courts frequently have ruled against local
governments that exceeded their authority.
There are four levels in the common law court system:
Communal and district courts, courts of first instance, the Appeals Court,
and the Supreme Court. While in theory there is a single court system
under the Ministry of Justice, other courts also operate, including:
The Special Court of Justice, which handles cases of civil servants who are
implicated in corruption; administrative courts, which deal with the
decisions of the bureaucracy; commercial courts, which deal with business
disputes; and the military tribunal, for cases involving military personnel
and, on certain occasions, matters pertaining to state security (although
state security cases also may fall within the jurisdiction of the regular
court system).
Although there is a single court system for most
nonmilitary matters, family issues such as marriage, divorce, child support
and custody, and inheritance are adjudicated by judges trained in Shari'a
(Islamic law) as applied in the country. Judges considering criminal
cases or cases in nonfamily areas of civil law generally are trained in the
French legal tradition. All judges trained in recent years are
graduates of the National Institute for Judicial Studies, where they
undergo 3 years of study heavily focused on human rights and the rule of
law. It is not necessary to be a lawyer to become a judge, and the
majority of judges are not lawyers.
In general detainees are arraigned before a court of
first instance. If the infraction is minor and not contested, the
judge may order the defendant released or impose a light sentence. If
an investigation is required, the judge may release defendants on their own
recognizance. According to reliable sources, cases often are
adjudicated on the basis of confessions, some of which are obtained under
duress.
While appeal courts may in some cases be used as a
second reference for courts of first instance, they primarily handle cases
involving crimes punishable by 5 years or more in prison. In
practice, defendants before appeals courts who are implicated in such
crimes consequently have no method of appeal if a judgment goes against
them. The Supreme Court does not review and rule on cases sent to it
by courts of appeal; in its role as a court of cassation, the Supreme Court
may overturn an appellate court's ruling on procedural grounds alone.
The absence of appeals for defendants in such crimes therefore becomes more
problematic given the fact that an investigation into the case by a "juge
d'instruction" (pretrial investigating judge) is only mandatory in
those crimes punishable by sentences of life imprisonment or death.
Justice Minister Azziman has stated that he would attempt to end petty
corruption in the judiciary by increasing judges' salaries and ensuring
punishment for bribe-takers, as well as attempt to end all informal and
inappropriate influences on judicial decision-making in the court system.
Nonetheless, the court system remains subject to extrajudicial pressures.
Despite recent increases, salaries for both judges and their staffs remain
modest; as a result, some observers allege that petty bribery remains a
routine cost of court business. In some courts, especially in minor
criminal cases, some observers allege that defendants or their families
must pay bribes to court officers and judges to secure a favorable
disposition.
However, throughout the year, the national media
reported on a number of arrests, convictions, and sentences of judicial
officials for their role in petty corruption. Reports also indicated
that the Special Court of Justice, despite its resource constraints,
increasingly prosecuted public servants for corruption. In October at
the recommendation of the Justice Ministry, the King approved new internal
statutory regulations for the High Council of the Magistrature.
According to press reports, the new regulations were implemented to
strengthen the independence of the judiciary.
After his appointment in 1997 by then-King Hassan II,
Justice Minister Azziman began to reduce the judiciary's relationship with
the Ministry of Interior. Nevertheless, judges continue to work
closely with the Interior Ministry's local network of officials, or "caids"
(although as judicial police, caids technically fall under the jurisdiction
of the Justice Ministry), who often legally are charged with the
responsibility of questioning criminal defendants. Caids frequently
prepare the written summary of an arrest and subsequent interrogation.
The summary is admissible in court as an element of the evidentiary process
and can carry great weight with the judge. After the new Justice
Minister's appointment, the Ministry of Justice began to reassert its
authority and control over judges.
The law does not distinguish political and security
cases from common criminal cases. In serious state security cases,
communications between the Ministry of Interior and the court are more
direct. At the Government's discretion, such cases may be brought
before a specially constituted military tribunal, which is subservient to
other branches of the Government, especially the military and the Ministry
of Interior.
Aside from external pressures, the court system also is
subject to resource constraints. Consequently, criminal defendants
charged with less-serious offenses often receive only a cursory hearing,
with judges relying on police reports to render decisions. Although
the Government provides an attorney at public expense for serious crimes
(when the offense carries a maximum sentence of over 5 years), appointed
attorneys often provide inadequate representation.
In 1999 Minister Azziman announced that in the preceding
12 months the judicial system had enforced judgments in 60,000 out of
100,000 cases of civil litigation, which represented significant progress
toward eliminating a persistent backlog. The Justice Ministry
continued to make progress clearing this backlog during the year.
In 1998 the OMDH issued a report that assessed the
status of the judiciary. According to the OMDH, the Youssoufi
administration took a series of steps to improve the court system,
including rooting out high-level corruption, naming a new Director for
Judicial Administration at the Justice Ministry, reactivating a Justice
Ministry disciplinary body, publishing that body's deliberations and
decisions, and organizing free and fair elections to that body.
Nevertheless, the OMDH called for additional reforms, including changing
laws to reduce the Justice Minister's prerogative to suspend judges through
the High Council of the Magsitrature, revamping the Criminal Code (which
the OMDH stated offers insufficient protection for a fair trial),
strengthening the law on civil liberties, and compelling judges to place
their assets in a blind trust. The OMDH also called on the State to
punish those officials guilty of human rights abuses. Finally, the
OMDH noted the lack of resources necessary for documentation tracking and
for court facilities. At its fourth annual congress held in March,
during which it distributed its annual human rights report for 2000, the
OMDH called for the elimination of "courts of exception"
(military tribunals, the Special Court of Justice, and the High Court), for
the strengthening of judges' independence, and greater resources for the
Justice Ministry.
During the year, the courts handled an increasing number
of cases that involved sensitive human rights issues, most of which were
covered openly and extensively by national and international media.
Trial subjects included freedom of the press, alleged Polisario Front
espionage, and Sahrawi student demonstrations in the capital and Marrakech.
Defense attorneys involved in these cases, most of whom were prominent
human rights activists and members of the AMDH and OMDH, generally agreed
that the majority of the judicial processes pertaining to the cases were
marked by significant irregularities, and that these irregularities
infringed on the rights to a fair trial for the accused.
Mustapha Adib, a young air force captain, was
incarcerated in December 1999 and tried before a military court for
allegedly violating the Military Code and libeling the military. The
authorities detained Adib after he spoke out against military corruption
and harassment to a journalist from the French newspaper Le Monde. On
February 17, a military court convicted Adib after 4 days of proceedings
during which the judge rejected nearly every legal motion advanced by the
defense. The court denied the defense's requests that the court make
the trial public, allow the defense to summon more than a dozen defense
witnesses and present documentary evidence, and recuse one of the military
judges, who was a former superior of Adib's. The judge whom the
defense asked to be recused allegedly was responsible for blocking Adib's
promotions after Adib made the allegations of corruption in a 1998 letter
to then-Crown Prince Sidi Mohammed (now King Mohammed VI).
The military tribunal sentenced Adib to the maximum
prison term of 5 years and expelled him from the air force. Human
rights activists criticized the unfair nature of the trial; the OMDH issued
a report on February 21 contending that closed trials unjustly influenced
the results and accused the court of partiality in refusing to recuse
Adib's former superior. After deciding on a "silent
defense" to protest the military court's conduct of the case, the
attorney representing Adib characterized the trial as a "travesty of
justice." Following an appeal on procedural grounds lodged by
Adib's attorney immediately following the end of the trial, and after Adib
staged a 5-day hunger strike in early May, the Supreme Court in June
announced that it would review the case. On June 14, the Supreme
Court overruled the military court and announced that the case would be
retried by a new military tribunal composed of different judges.
Adib's defense team called the decision a "historic judgment."
A newly constituted military court in Rabat retried
Adib's case in early October. After 3 days of hearings, during which
the court again refused to hear witnesses requested by the defense and
rejected multiple other defense motions, the military court found Adib
guilty of the charges initially brought against him. The court
reduced Adib's sentence to 21/2 years in prison and upheld his expulsion
from the military. Adib's lawyer criticized the verdict as
"neither just nor equitable," and said that he would appeal the
new verdict. On September 28, before the retrial began, the
international NGO Transparency International recognized Captain Adib with
one of its Integrity Awards for his courage in fighting corruption, which
Adib's lawyer accepted for him in Canada. In early November, Amnesty
International identified Adib as a "prisoner of conscience."
On April 5, a Moroccan civil court in the Western Sahara
city of Laayoune sentenced five Sahrawi youth to prison terms of between 5
and 10 years for the "formation of a criminal association" after
their alleged participation in a March 4 stone-throwing event in Laayoune,
which reliable sources say was spontaneous, unorganized, and lasted for
only 5 minutes. The demonstration followed similar protests by
Sahrawi students in several southern Moroccan and Western Sahara cities at
the end of February and early March that security forces dispersed
violently (see Sections 1.c., 1.d., 1.f., and 2.b.).
Attendees at the trial, including human rights activists
and an attorney for the five defendants criticized the handling of the
trial, particularly the court's refusal to hear witnesses for the defense
who allegedly could have testified that at least two of the five defendants
had been elsewhere at the time of the incident. In addition to the
police reports, the court allegedly based its judgment on the testimony of
two witnesses, one of whom reportedly could not positively identify the
accused, and another who was not present at the trial, but who claimed that
he saw in his rear view mirror a youth throwing a bottle at his car.
The prosecution reportedly did not present any physical evidence, nor did
it present any witness who could testify that the five accused were the
ones who had thrown the bottle. The authorities claimed that the
youths threw rocks at several vehicles, including one belonging to
peacekeepers from the U.N. MINURSO contingent based in Laayoune, and
attempted to set fire to a truck. However, the youth were acquitted
of the arson charge during the trial.
A lawyer for the youths, who maintained the prosecution
did not prove an incriminating act, said that "the verdict had nothing
to do with justice." The lawyer also alleged that the judicial
police investigating the affair committed several illegal acts by
unlawfully entering homes of the accused and detaining them, torturing the
accused during their detention, and forcing the accused under duress to
sign police reports, which they were not allowed to read and which they
claimed contained falsehoods. The decision was appealed to the court
of appeals in Laayoune and then reportedly to the Supreme Court in Rabat;
no final ruling had been made by year's end. Families of the five
Sahrawi youth also sent a letter to the Royal Palace in May requesting a
royal pardon (see Sections 1.c., 1.d., and 1.f.).
On May 26, the court of first instance in Marrakech
sentenced 13 students to 3 years in prison for their alleged participation
in a riot on May 17 and 18 near their university campus. The 13
students, 8 of whom were Sahrawis, were convicted on charges of armed
gathering, assault with weapons, contempt of public servants while
exercising their duties, destruction of public goods, and impeding free
movement. Two others were sentenced to 2 months, and in June one more
student was sentenced to 5 years for setting fire to a public vehicle,
damaging municipal property, and contempt of a civil servant exercising his
duty. Thirty to 40 students reportedly were detained by police
initially. According to one of the lawyers representing the students,
judicial authorities showed little concern for the need to respect due
process throughout the investigation of the events and the trial.
There were no arrest warrants and no evidence was presented against any of
those charged except the police statement of facts, which none of the
defendants had signed (all had been forced to provide their thumbprint on
the statement in lieu of a signature). The lawyers were not allowed
to present evidence in court that could have exonerated their clients.
For example, one of those convicted claimed that he had not been in
Marrakech during the events. He was not allowed to present the
testimony of friends in another city with whom he said he had been
visiting.
Students involved in the demonstrations and press
reports claimed that after an initial encounter between students and
police, both the police and students called in reinforcements to their
respective sides. A sit-in of roughly 60 students (not all Sahrawis)
in the public street in front of their residence then was held, which
police reportedly broke up by force after negotiations failed. When
another sit-in was organized, the police again forcibly dispersed students
and arrested several dozen (not all Sahrawis). Lawyers for the 13
defendants appealed the court's conviction of their clients.
According to Sahrawis and Sahrawi defense lawyers in Rabat, an appellate
court in Marrakesh at the end of the summer upheld the original conviction.
However, the court reduced all of the 3-year sentences by 1 year each.
Among those detained by the police was a young Sahrawi student who claimed
to have been tortured by two police officers in an isolated area near the
university campus. The Sahrawi displayed fresh marks from cigarette
burns to a foreign diplomat to support the allegations (see Sections 1.c.,
1.d., and 2.b.).
During the late evening of May 17 in Rabat, police
arrested 14 students at Mohammed V University and charged them with arson,
violence against the police, erecting barricades, and impeding free
movement. The students, 12 of whom were Sahrawis, had participated
earlier in the evening in a solidarity protest for fellow Sahrawi students
who had been arrested that morning in Marrakech. The detained
students reportedly admitted to staging two sit-ins in solidarity with
their peers in Marrakech, but denied, as alleged by the authorities, any
use of force or violence against the police who arrested them. The
police contended that the students refused to disperse, then threw rocks at
them and their vehicles. According to students, near midnight the
same evening, police squads returned to the university, entered it, set up
checkpoints, detained students without identity cards, and broke into
dormitories in search of those who participated in the sit-ins earlier in
the day.
According to a lawyer who represented 13 of the accused
students, one of his clients said that police took him to an unidentified
location after his arrest, beat him severely, and interrogated him
regarding his activities and links with other Sahrawi and human rights
activists. Noting his client's difficulty in speaking in court and
drawing attention to his swollen face and eyes, the lawyer requested the
pretrial investigating judge to conduct a medical examination of his
client, which the judge refused. According to the lawyer, after their
arrest, the students were held incommunicado longer than the legal limit of
48 hours, and nobody was informed of their whereabouts during this time, as
required by law. At preliminary legal proceedings on May 22 at the
Rabat court of appeals, all 14 of the accused reportedly denied violent
acts during the demonstration; however, in three of the police reports
submitted to the court, three of the accused allegedly had admitted to
violent acts. None of the depositions by the accused were signed; all
were marked only by the defendants' thumbprints. After a series of
hearings and delays, on November 17, the Rabat court of appeals acquitted
and freed all 14 students who were detained in mid-May. According to
a lawyer for the defense, all of the detained students denied before the
court any involvement in the demonstration. The prosecution
reportedly failed to produce any witnesses who could confirm the students'
participation in the May 17 incident (see Section 1.c.).
On October 27, 10 students at the University of Hassan I
in Settat were tried for their involvement in the October 23 demonstrations
that police broke up violently (see Section 2.b.). Each of the 10
students reportedly declared before the court that they were forced under
duress and torture to sign (by thumb prints) their police statements.
According to a PPS political party communique, two of its members involved
in the incident "were victims of grave physical cruelty" during
their transfer to the police station and during their detention. The
defendants' lawyers unsuccessfully requested that the case be dropped on
the grounds that the judicial police had not, as mandated by law, notified
family members of the students' arrest. The court reportedly also
refused the defense's request to have the students examined by a doctor, as
is permissible by law if signs of physical distress are visible. At
the end of the day-long trial, the Settat court of first instance found all
10 students guilty of the charges and sentenced them to from 3 to 5 months
in prison (three were given suspended sentences). Following an appeal
lodged by defense lawyers, on November 9, the Settat court of appeal
reduced the sentences of the seven students sent to prison, reducing four
of them from 5 to 3 months and three of them from 3 to 2 months.
In an abruptly convened trial, 14 students who had been
arrested during violent clashes between students and police at Mohammedia
University on November 21 were convicted of disturbance of public order and
sentenced to 2 years' imprisonment and fines ranging from $50 to $150 (500
to 1,500 dirhams). The alleged victims of the students' vandalism did
not appear at the trial to testify or be cross-examined (see Sections 1.c.
and 2.b.).
The Government pressed charges against 33 human rights
activists who were involved in a protest before Parliament on December 9:
the trial was scheduled for February 2001 (see Sections 1.c., 1.d., 2.a.,
2.b., and 4).
In December 1999, Moroccan security forces that
reportedly were dispatched from Rabat detained one Sahrawi in the Western
Sahara city of Laayoune and two Sahrawis in the southern Moroccan cities of
Tan-Tan and Agadir. Alleged to be spies serving the Polisario Front,
the three reportedly were held for 8 days before their appearance in an
Agadir court and before their families were informed of their detention.
Family members and the AMDH denounced the nature of the arrests, calling
them a violation of human rights, due process, and proof that forced
disappearances still occurred in Morocco. In a public trial convened
on May 30 after a lengthy and largely unpublicized police investigation
that was originally to be heard by a military tribunal, the three were
convicted of threatening the internal security of the state and sentenced
to 3 to 4 years in prison by Agadir's court of first instance. During
an appellate hearing on July 5, at the request of the public prosecutor all
three were given the same sentence of 4 years. The abrupt convening
of the public trial at the end of May also coincided with the decision of
judicial authorities to change the jurisdiction of the case from the court
of appeals to the court of first instance. (The court of first
instance deals with lesser crimes punishable by sentences of 5 years and
less; the court of appeals with serious crimes involving sentences of 5
years and more.) According to a lawyer representing the Sahrawis,
during the trial the three accused denied any relations with the Polisario
Front, contradicting confessions allegedly made during their detention (see
Sections 1.b. and 1.d.). On September 27, security forces in civilian
dress detained a fourth Sahrawi at the Laayoune airport as he was about to
board a flight to the Canary Islands. According to the Sahrawi's
daughter, who witnessed the incident, two members of the security forces
drove away with her father in a car with Casablanca license plates.
Almost 10 days later, the Sahrawi reappeared in Agadir and also was charged
before the court of first instance for spying for the Polisario Front.
Two days later, the fourth Sahrawi was sentenced to 4 years in prison for
threatening the internal security of the state.
Sadok El-Kihal, a trucker and regional bureau member of
the Istiqlal party's union, the UGTM, contacted AMDH during the year
with accusations that he had been arrested arbitrarily, jailed, tortured,
and falsely convicted by authorities in June 1999 following his
participation in a national truckers strike. Arrested and jailed on
charges of forming a criminal gang and setting fire to a vehicle, El-Kihal
alleged that security forces in the Gendarmerie of Taouriate (Oujda
province) tortured him and wrote a false police report that they forced him
to endorse with his thumbprint without allowing him to read it first.
El-Kihal contests that it was this police report that formed the basis of
his conviction at the Oujda court of appeals, which sentenced him to 2
years' imprisonment. El-Kihal subsequently benefited from a royal
pardon and was freed on May 4 (see Sections 1.c., 1.d., and 6.a.).
During the evening of June 18, up to 100 members of the
security forces attacked the UMT headquarters in Rabat, where 12 Group 314
members were in the 11th day of a hunger strike. Using tear gas and
batons, security forces violently cleared all demonstrators from the area,
arresting up to 100 protesters and evacuating the hunger strikers, who had
been forced out by tear gas. Dozens of protesters were reported
injured, some seriously. Twenty-two of those arrested, most of whom
were ANDC members, were charged with "using violence against agents of
authority." During their trial in July, 30 lawyers representing
the 22 defendants withdrew after the tribunal refused their--and allegedly
the prosecution's--request to summon witnesses. In a press conference
following their withdrawal, the lawyers said "necessary conditions for
a fair trial were absent." One lawyer defending the ANDC members
said that there were multiple procedural errors in the conduct of the
judicial investigation and the trial. The lawyer also claimed that
all of the police statements regarding the defendants contained falsehoods,
and that none of them had been signed. After the lawyers withdrew,
the defendants refused to participate in the trial. The tribunal
subsequently closed the proceedings to the public and proceeded to sentence
all 22 defendants. Nineteen of the defendants received 2-month
suspended sentences and $50 (500 dirhams) fines and three were sentenced to
2 months in prison and $50 (500 dirhams) fines (see Sections 1.c., 1.d.,
and 2.b.).
During and following public demonstrations in the
Western Sahara city of Laayoune in September 1999, more than 150 persons
were detained by police authorities. Most were released within a
matter of days; however, 26 persons were tried on criminal charges for
actions in connection with the protests and sentenced to imprisonment for
periods ranging from 10 to 15 years. The OMDH claimed that the trial
of these persons was unfair and insisted that the defendants were not
provided adequate legal counsel for their defense. By year's end,
none of the 26 persons convicted in 1999 had their sentences reduced or
overturned (see Sections 1.f. and 2.b.).
The Government continued to hold a number of political
prisoners. According to the AMDH and OMDH, seven political prisoners
remained in detention at year's end. In January King Mohammed VI
pardoned 2,000 prisoners, 1 of whom was Arsalan Samouzi, a political
prisoner who was sentenced to 5 years' imprisonment for insulting the royal
family during the reign of King Hassan II. The official Moroccan
press agency, MAP, quoted the Justice Minister as saying in a July 23
television interview that there are no more political prisoners in
detention. In the past, the Ministry of Interior claimed that there
were 55 Islamists serving sentences for offenses that ranged from arms
smuggling in the 1980's to participating in a bomb attack on a hotel in
Marrakech in 1994. In the past, there also were claims that some of
these Islamists were imprisoned solely for calling for an Islamic state
during the 1980's. The AMDH claims that 2 members of the "Group
of 26," an Islamist group involved in smuggling arms into the country
from Algeria in the mid-1980's, remain in prison. The other 24
members completed their sentences or otherwise were released at various
times between 1994 and the end of the year. Various international
human rights groups' estimates of the number of persons in prison for
advocating independence for the Western Sahara vary from none to 700.
Amnesty International lists dozens of persons whom it considers to be
political prisoners. According to several human rights organizations,
achieving consensus on a definitively accurate number of political
prisoners is extremely difficult, mainly because conditions in the Western
Sahara complicate attempts to confirm whether Sahrawis were imprisoned
solely for their political affiliation or open advocacy of Western Saharan
independence, or whether they were imprisoned for other actions in
violation of the law. The AMDH claims that it knows of no persons
imprisoned for having overtly advocating Western Saharan independence.
Although the Government claims that it no longer holds
political prisoners, it permits international humanitarian organizations to
visit prisoners whom such organizations consider to be imprisoned for
political reasons.
f. Arbitrary Interference with Privacy, Family, Home or Correspondence
The Constitution states that the home is inviolable and
that no search or investigation may take place without a search warrant,
and the law stipulates that a search warrant may be issued by a prosecutor
on good cause; however, authorities sometimes ignore these provisions.
Security forces allegedly entered homes in pursuit of persons associated
with a strike at a water-bottling factory in February (see Sections 1.c.,
1.d., 2.b., 2.d., and 6.a.). One of the lawyers representing five
Sahrawi youths who were sentenced to jail terms for their alleged
participation in a March 4 stone-throwing incident in Laayoune, alleged
that the judicial police who investigated the affair committed several
illegal acts, including unlawfully entering homes of the youths (see
Sections 1.c., 1.d., and 1.e.).
During protests in Laayoune in the Western Sahara in
September and October 1999, police reportedly encouraged local thugs to
break into, loot, and destroy private shops. Following the protests
in October 1999, police unlawfully entered homes to arrest persons
associated with the demonstrations. Human rights NGO's claimed that
such police actions created a "climate of fear" in the city,
forcing some families to flee the city or change residences nightly to
avoid such police actions. There reportedly was no official
investigation into such government actions by year's end (see Sections
1.c., 1.d., 1.e., and 2.a.).
Government security services monitor certain persons and
organizations, both foreign and Moroccan, and government informers monitor
activities on university campuses.
Section 2 Respect for Civil Liberties, Including:
a. Freedom of Speech and Press
The Constitution provides for freedom of expression;
however, the Government systematically restricted press freedom regarding a
few topics that the Government considers sensitive, and appeared to
increase restrictions on some other topics with the potential to reflect
negatively on the country's international image. Nonetheless,
newspapers and weeklies from across the political spectrum, from Socialist
to nationalist to Islamist, publish freely, and the Government permitted
extensive coverage during the year of formerly taboo topics.
The Government owns the official press agency, Maghreb
Arab Press (MAP), and the Arabic daily Al-Anbaa. The Government also
supports two semiofficial dailies, the French-language Le Matin and the
Arabic-language Assahra. In addition the Government provides
subsidies to the rest of the press through price supports for newsprint and
office space. A 1958 decree grants the Government the authority to
register and license domestic newspapers and journals. Authorities
may use the licensing process to prevent the publication of materials that
they believe cross the threshold of tolerable dissent. Offending
publications may be declared a danger to state security and seized, the
publisher's license suspended, and equipment destroyed. The Ministry
of Interior may control foreign publications by collecting
"banned" publications after they have been distributed.
There were multiple reports that authorities pressured domestic-based
printers not to print several newspapers, including two belonging to the
JCO. In addition, the administrators of the new weekly publication
Demain alleged in April that the authorities attempted to block the
printing of their publication because of its investigative editorial line.
According to Demain's administrators, the alleged attempt to influence the
magazine's editorial line led them to move the weekly's printing operations
to Spain. The media continue to engage regularly in self-censorship
to avoid the Government's attention and possible sanctions.
The Press Code empowers the Minister of Interior to
confiscate publications that are judged offensive by the Government.
Under the code, the Prime Minister may order the indefinite suspension of a
publication. The Press Code also empowers the Government to censor
newspapers directly by ordering them not to report on specific items or
events. In most past instances, government control of the media
generally has been exercised through directives and "guidance"
from the Ministry of Interior. However, during the year, the
Government fined several journalists for articles that they had published,
and sentenced one to prison. The King subsequently pardoned the
journalist who was sentenced to prison, and the fines issued against the
other journalists allegedly later were dropped. The Government
generally tolerates satirical and often stinging editorials in the
opposition parties' dailies. However, both law and tradition
historically have prohibited criticism on three topics: The Monarchy,
Morocco's claim to the Western Sahara, and the sanctity of Islam.
There were approximately 2,000 domestic and foreign
newspapers, magazines, and journals in circulation during the year.
Prior to Sheikh Abdessalam Yassine's release after 11
years of house arrest for refusing to acknowledge the religious authority
of then-King Hassan II, the Government on February 5 temporarily
confiscated from newsstands in major cities several newspapers that
contained a 19-page memorandum addressed by Yassine in late January to King
Mohammed VI, in which Yassine asked the King to return to the populace the
wealth that he alleged that the King's late father had stolen from the
country. However, the Government permitted the three publications to
be put back on the newsstands the same day. On February 8 and 9,
then-Communication Minister Larbi Messari declared that the memorandum was
not banned, that it was available on the Internet, and that the concerned
newspapers were back in circulation. Messari reportedly said that the
confiscation was "incidental," and that censorship was absurd and
no longer practiced in the country. Four members of the JCO were
arrested in February for distributing the memorandum in Tangiers and Ben
Slimane (near Casablanca). All four were charged with "violating
the sacred institution of the Monarchy." According to the AMDH,
by February 7 the authorities had dropped the charges and released all four
(see Sections 1.d., 2.c., and 2.d.).
The Government banned the distribution of the February 15-21 edition of the
Jeune Afrique L'Intelligent weekly magazine. The weekly contained a
letter by a Moroccan political scientist living abroad, which criticized
the reign of King Hassan II and challenged King Mohammed VI to devote
greater effort to much-needed reforms. According to press reports,
civilian authorities from a Casablanca commisariat asked the national
distributor of Jeune Afrique in Morocco not to distribute the issue.
In the main editorial column in the subsequent edition of Jeune Afrique,
the editors stated that they interpreted the commissariat's request as a
ban and decided to withdraw its 8,000 copies from Morocco rather than wait
for its local distributor to receive the written prohibition order it had
requested from the authorities; the distributor reportedly never received
the order. On February 16, Communication Minister Messari sent a
letter to the distributor demanding to know who in the Government had
banned the issue, claiming that the Communication Ministry was not
involved. The Government never established who gave the order to the
local commissariat.
The Government banned the distribution of the March 4
issue of the French daily newspaper Le Figaro. The issue contained an
article about the fate of the late Mehdi Ben Barka, former National Union
of Popular Forces (UNFP--later to become USFP) party founding member and
secretary general who reportedly was killed in Paris in 1965 by French
thugs, allegedly at the request of the Moroccan secret service. The
source of the article reportedly at the time was a physician of then-King
Hassan II. Although the Government gave no formal statement
explaining the ban, on May 5 then-Communication Minister Messari commented
at a U.N. Education and Science Organization (UNESCO)-sponsored seminar on
human rights that "I banned the Le Figaro issue ... because it
contained defamation threatening to a cause of our national history."
On April 15, police at Marrakech airport seized and
prevented the distribution of two related leading weekly investigative
newspapers, the French-language Le Journal and its Arabic-language
counterpart Assahifa, after their arrival from printers in France.
The two domestic publications were banned at the orders of Prime Minister
Youssoufi after Le Journal published an interview that its editor in chief
held with Mohammed Abdelaziz, leader of the Polisario Front. The
Government's ban of the publications coincided with the visit to the
country of U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Mary Robinson. The
Government explained the ban in a Communication Ministry communique the
same day, characterizing Le Journal's interview with Abdelaziz "an
event organized by certain milieus hostile to our country (and) in homage
to the separatist (Sahrawi) impudence." The communique also
cited as explanation "the extension of constant excesses in the
editorial line of the two publications with regard to the handling of the
question of our territorial integrity."
Aboubakr Jamai, editor in chief of Le Journal,
criticized the government decision to censor the newspaper, claiming that
other Moroccan publications recently had published similar articles
containing material from interviews with the Polisario Front leader.
At a press conference convened on April 17 by Le Journal's and Assahifa's
parent corporation, Mediatrust, Jamai expressed concern that the ban likely
had more to do with his paper's aggressive reporting on other topics.
On April 17, the board of directors of the state-run television station 2M
fired the station's top three officials for, according to Communication
Minister Larbi Messari, having made a "professional mistake"
during an April 14 broadcast. The professional mistake is widely
believed to have been the station's televised reference in its evening
newscast to Le Journal's controversial interview with Polisario Front
leader Abdelaziz. On April 29, government spokesperson Khalid Alioua
apologized for the ban of Assahifa, calling it an error. Unlike in Le
Journal, Assahifa contained no reference to the interview with Abdelaziz.
On April 19, the AMDH reacted to the bans of the two newspapers and the
firing of 2M's leadership by issuing a communique criticizing decisions
that "gravely threaten the freedom of the press."
On April 26, a Casablanca court convicted Mustapha
Alaoui, the editor of the Arabic-language daily Al-Ousbou, of libel and
defamation of Foreign Minister Mohammed Benaissa, for a controversial
article Alaoui published that alleged financial misfeasance in a real
estate matter involving Benaissa while the latter served abroad as an
ambassador. The court sentenced Alaoui to 3 months in prison, forbade
him to practice journalism for 3 years and ordered him to pay approximately
$100,000 (1,000,000 dirhams) in damages to Benaissa and a $2,000 (20,000
dirhams) fine. On April 27, Khalid Mechbal, the editor of the
Tangiers-based weekly news publication Al-Shamal, also was convicted of
libel and defamation in a case lodged by Benaissa for publishing a similar
article. Mechbal received a 6-month suspended jail term, was
forbidden from practicing journalism for 1 year, and was ordered to pay an
approximately $2,000 (20,000 dirhams) fine. On May 3, another court
convicted Alaoui of libel and defamation for an article he published
concerning Fouad Filali, the estranged former brother-in-law of King
Mohammed VI; Alaoui was sentenced a 3-month suspended jail term and ordered
to pay approximately $10,000 (100,000 dirhams) in damages and a $500 (5,000
dirhams) fine.
Journalists and human rights activists protested the
court's decision to invoke statutes from the Criminal Code--rather than the
Press Code--to punish the editors and ban them from exercising their
profession. The Moroccan National Press Union (SNPM) stated in an
April 27 communique that "the pronouncement of prison terms in issues
of publishing and the press flagrantly contradicts the rule of law and the
freedom of expression." On May 3, human rights activists and
journalists demonstrated in front of the Communication Ministry to express
their concerns about the convictions and other press censorship cases.
Mustapha Alaoui stated that "not even in the time of the French
protectorate had a Moroccan journalist ever been forbidden from exercising
his profession."
After immediately appealing the Casablanca court's
decision, Alaoui and Mechbal learned in late May that the King had pardoned
them, and allowed them to return to their professions without serving time
in jail. However, they still were obligated to pay the damages and
the fines. On July 6, while Alaoui awaited an appellate hearing to
determine the issue of damages and fines, the authorities banned Alaoui's
newspaper from publication, and forbade Casablanca printers from printing
it. According to press reports, on July 31, the Casablanca court of
appeal accepted reciprocal requests from lawyers representing Alaoui and
Benaissa to withdraw Alaoui's appeal and Benaissa's civil litigation.
The press reports indicated that the court of appeal also reduced Alaoui's
$2,000 (20,000 dirhams) fine to $100 (1,000 dirhams); however, independent
sources alleged that Alaoui's fine was dropped altogether, as were the
damages that he originally was ordered to pay to Benaissa in April.
On May 15, the Paris-based Reporters Without Borders
(Reporters Sans Frontieres--RSF) criticized Morocco for banning seven local
and foreign newspapers, and appealed to King Mohammed VI to ensure press
freedom. The International Committee to Protect Journalists also
raised the same concerns in a letter to Prime Minister Youssoufi in the
spring.
According to press reports in late May and early July,
the authorities allegedly blocked the publication of two newspapers, Al-Adl
Wal Ihsane and Rissalat Al-Futuwa, associated with Sheikh Yassine's Justice
and Charity Organization. The authorities reportedly ordered printers
of the two newspapers to suspend their distribution (see Sections 1.d.,
2.c., and 2.d.). In September the directors of the two publications
delivered to human right organizations and the press a letter that claimed
that government authorities had issued administrative orders against the
publication and sale of the two newspapers. The directors also stated
that various printers had been threatened and pressured not to print the
newspapers.
In its June 23-29 issue, the independent weekly Le
Journal reported that the secretary general of RSF had written a letter to
Interior Minister Midaoui protesting the Government's "heavy
surveillance" of a visiting French journalist, and its confiscation of
the reporter's videocassette tapes as he was leaving Rabat airport.
The secretary general asked Minister Midaoui to "provide him with
explanations" of the Government's actions. The French journalist
allegedly was writing an investigative article about Mehdi Ben Barka, a
leftist political leader allegedly kidnapped and murdered in Paris in 1965
by French thugs at the request of the Moroccan secret service.
During a protest by disabled unemployed university
graduates on September 12, police reportedly attempted to remove the camera
equipment of one photojournalist covering the demonstration, and jostled
and threatened other news correspondents on the scene (see Sections 1.c.
and 2.b.).
In its September 23-29 edition, Le Journal reported that
government authorities banned the distribution of a September issue of the
London-based magazine The Economist, which contained a report on Morocco's
August announcement of new oil finds in the eastern part of the country.
The Economist report questioned the scale of the findings as announced by
the Government. A local representative of The Economist confirmed the
banning.
On October 4, at a press briefing convened by the
Government, Interior Minister Midaoui publicly threatened Aboubakr Jamai,
the director of Le Journal, warning against publishing sensitive stories
related to Mohammed Abdelaziz, the leader of the Polisario Front.
Midaoui threatened to ban Le Journal again if the newspaper conducted and
published more such interviews. RSF responded to the incident with a
letter to Prime Minister Youssoufi, which related the NGO's concerns about
the recent decline in press freedoms.
In early October, over the period of several days, the
Government accused of espionage, detained, and held under house arrest
three French television journalists from France's FR3 television station,
who were reporting on a government-authorized human rights demonstration at
the notorious former secret detention center of Tazmamart. Despite
their possession of two authorization papers from the Government to tape
throughout the country, the journalists were stopped by security forces
after they had taped the former detention center the morning before the
October 7 demonstration. (Other domestic and international media
later filmed the same footage without incident.) Local justice
officials summoned the FR3 journalists to a nearby tribunal on October 8,
but the journalists refused the officials' request to hand over the
material that had been taped at Tazmamart. The journalists then were
placed under house arrest in the city of Er-Rachidia by security forces and
kept under surveillance. During this time, the authorities
confiscated the journalists' video material, passports, and personal
belongings, and accused them of "violating military secrets" for
videotaping Tazmamart (which became a military weapons depot after the
secret detention center closed in 1991). After French officials
intervened, the authorities released the three journalists on October 9.
Before leaving the country, the journalists signed a document agreeing to
return to cooperate with the legal investigation of the affair. One
of the FR3 journalists who was detained was Joseph Tual, the French
journalist who had been monitored in June and whose video material then
also was confiscated by security forces at Rabat airport.
On November 4, the Government withdrew the accreditation
and ordered the expulsion of Claude Juvenal, a Morocco-based French
correspondent for Agence France Presse (AFP). According to MAP, a
source from the Ministry of Culture and Communication stated that Juvenal
had "breached professional ethics by engaging in initiatives hostile
to Morocco and its institutions." According to the semiofficial
daily newspaper Le Matin du Sahara, Juvenal had "for several years
continually, and in sheer bad faith, cast doubt on, criticized and
misrepresented every initiative and reform undertaken by Morocco."
Juvenal's expulsion resulted in a strong negative reaction from domestic
and international media. The SNPM issued a communique protesting the
expulsion, stating that the authorities' justification for the expulsion
"remains ambiguous and hence unacceptable." The SNPM in its
communiques and the RSF claimed that the expulsion illustrated growing
intolerance by the authorities toward press freedom. A group of
Morocco-based Spanish journalists wrote a letter to Minister of Culture and
Communication Mohammed Achaari, in which they expressed their concerns that
similar measures could be taken "at any moment against other
journalists" and informed the Minister that they were seeking the
protection of the Spanish Government and the European Union for themselves.
Minister Achaari refused to explain the reasons for the expulsion when he
was asked on national television.
On December 2, Prime Minister Youssoufi banned
indefinitely three independent weekly publications known for their
politically sensitive investigative reports. The Prime Minister
banned the French weekly publications Le Journal and Demain and the Arabic
weekly Assahifa, a sister publication of Le Journal, after they published
or commented on a 1974 letter alleging that Youssoufi had participated in
coup plotting with other leftist leaders and the military against then-King
Hassan II in 1972. In banning the three publications, Youssoufi used
the highly controversial and long-criticized Article 77 of the Press Code,
which allows both the Prime Minister and Interior Minister to ban any
publication that "threatens the kingdom's political and religious
foundations." At their press conference on December 3, the three
editors in chief of the banned publications criticized the banning as
"a manifestation of intellectual terrorism." The SNPM
denounced the ban and the application of Article 77, urging the Government
to reconsider its decision and to reform the entire Press Code. The
AMDH also protested the ban, calling it a violation of the Constitution and
international conventions on human rights. International NGO's
criticized the banning as well. RSF called attention to the fact that
Youssoufi had promised to defend press freedoms upon assuming office in
1998, including revision of the entire Press Code. In mid-December,
two of the three weeklies filed a lawsuit against the government at the
administrative court of Rabat. In the meantime, Le Journal filed
paperwork to establish a new publication; approval of the application was
still pending at year's end.
Also in mid-December, the Government confiscated and
prevented distribution of the December 14-20 printed issue of the
international publication Courier International. The publication
contained four pages of articles written by the editors in chief of the
three domestic weeklies banned indefinitely by Youssoufi on December 2.
In their articles, the editors in chief attacked the Prime Minister's
decision to shut down their publications. The electronic versions of
the articles were available in the country on Courier International's
Internet web site.
Police reportedly confiscated journalists' photography
equipment during their December 9 and 10 violent dispersions of human
rights activists and JCO members in Rabat and other large cities (see
Sections 1.c., 1.d., 1.e., 2.b., and 4).
In general press articles containing unflattering
material that routinely had been prevented from circulation in past years,
with the exception of those related to the topics the Government still
considers sensitive, were permitted free circulation during the year.
These included reports on corruption in the Government and military,
financial scandals at public institutions, sensitive human rights-related
court cases, torture, violence against women, the exploitation of child
maids, prostitution, poverty, abandoned children, and harsh conditions
inside prisons.
In an October 23 "Open Letter to the Minister of
Justice" that it distributed to domestic as well as international
media, the AMDH for the first time published a list containing 14 names of
alleged former torturers and officials involved in disappearances and
arbitrary detention. The first domestic newspaper to republish the
list was Le Journal. Agence France Presse then distributed the list
of names abroad through its wire services. Some of the listed names
were high-ranking officials currently holding office. In the letter,
the AMDH called for "the truth and pursuit of those responsible for
disappearances." The AMDH also criticized the Justice Ministry
for its alleged nonintervention in past cases of torture and disappearance
(see Section 1.c.).
Also in October, the Government lifted its 17-year ban
on the book "For Bread Alone" ("Le Pain Nu") by the
Moroccan writer Mohammed Choukri. The book had been banned during
King Hassan II's reign reportedly for its sexually explicit overtones.
Throughout the year, journalists, NGO's, and human
rights activists increased their calls on the Government to enact a new
public liberties law, which Prime Minister Youssoufi announced that he
would enact when he assumed power in 1998. In January 1999, 42 NGO's
addressed a memorandum to the Prime Minister proposing amendments to the
law that governs the press, associations, and public gatherings.
Their proposals were aimed at easing current restrictions and giving
associations more freedom to organize and function. The present
Public Liberties Law dates from 1958, and many legal observers agree that
the sole amendment to the law, which was ratified in 1973, constituted a
setback to civil liberties. The amendment apparently introduced
restrictions that established firmer government control over the legal
establishment of associations and the associations' scope of action once
they are recognized legally and allowed to operate. In January before
Parliament, Youssoufi announced his intention to open a debate on the law.
However, unsatisfied with what it perceived to be the Government's slow
handling of the issue, the NGO network Espace Associatif held a large
roundtable conference in March in which it discussed reform of the law and
urged the Government to act more quickly and transparently. In an
April communique following the censorship of Le Journal and Assahifa, the
AMDH demanded "the immediate modification of the Public Liberties Law
and abrogation of all constraints that hinder freedom of the press."
At the same time, the OMDH issued a communique expressing frustration at
the Government's slow progress with respect to the reforms that the OMDH
had called for on numerous occasions. In May the Moroccan Barrister's
Association also called for reform of the Public Liberties Law.
In July and November, the King announced in two
nationally televised speeches that the Government was preparing legislation
for reforming the Public Liberties Law. Prime Minister Youssoufi's
Cabinet discussed draft legislation and reviewed a draft in mid-December.
The SNPM on December 19 rejected the draft Press Code contained in the
three-part legislation on the grounds that the SNPM had not been consulted
during the code's formulation. The SNPM claimed that the draft text
still permitted the Government to seize, confiscate, and ban publications,
and to punish those convicted of libel and defamation with jail sentences.
Domestic media and human rights activists long have criticized these
central provisions, which widely are perceived to repress and stifle the
freedom of expression. No final decisions were made by year's end
regarding the pubic liberties legislation. Before presenting the
draft legislation to the Cabinet in December, Prime Minister Youssoufi
presided over two interministerial discussions of the law in May and July.
The Government controls Radio-Television Marocaine (RTM)
broadcasts. Another major broadcaster is the French-backed Medi-1,
which operates from Tangier and broadcasts throughout Morocco and other
parts of North Africa. While nominally private and independent,
Medi-1 practices self-censorship, as do other media outlets. The
Government owns the only television stations whose broadcasts may be
received in most parts of the nation without decoders or satellite dish
antennas. In 1996 the Government purchased a majority share in 2M,
formerly the country's sole private station, which can be received in most
urban areas. The ostensible reason for the Government's action was to
save 2M from bankruptcy; the Government now owns 68 percent of 2M stock,
and the Minister of Communication, by virtue of his position, has become
the chairman of the board. A government-appointed committee monitors
broadcasts. Privatization of these stations continued to be a major
topic of political debate during the year, and the Government announced in
1998 that it was preparing a plan for 2M's resale to the private sector.
In its October 28-November 3 issue, the independent
magazine Demain reported that since July the Government had censored five
broadcasts of a local news team that worked for the Qatari satellite
television station Al-Jazira. According to Demain's and other press
reports, spokesmen for the government-controlled television stations stated
that the censored broadcasts (of domestic news items) were "technical
problems" experienced during satellite transmissions. In late
October, the SNPM criticized what it perceived to be a ban on the Qatari
station, charging that the government-controlled television stations
allowed other Arabic television stations to broadcast from the country.
The Government had recalled its ambassador to Qatar in mid-July, allegedly
in diplomatic retaliation for the Qatari Government's votes against
Morocco's bid to host the 2006 World Cup and its bid for the presidency of
the Organization of the Islamic Conference. The Government also
allegedly was concerned over what it perceived to be several negative
reports on Morocco that recently were produced by Al-Jazira.
For the past 13 years, the popular humorist Ahmed
Snoussi (also known as Bziz) has been prohibited from performing in the
country due to his satire of those in power. While the authorities
allowed Bziz to perform at the Mohammed V Theater in Rabat during the
summer, he still is prohibited from performing live on television. He
also faces restrictions on performing on university campuses. In
November the authorities reportedly prevented him from accepting students'
invitations to perform at universities in both Rabat and Tangiers.
In April Reuters news services reported the lifting of a
13-year ban on a book that described harsh conditions in a high-security
prison. According to the author, Abdelkader Chaoui, his book
"The Unachieved Past" had been banned since its publication in
1987. The book described the harsh conditions of the Kenitra prison
in which Chaoui was held for 15 years. Chaoui was jailed in 1974
because of his leftist political opinions (see Section 1.c.). In
November in Marrakesh, the King awarded Chaoui a literary prize for his
most recent novel.
After 11 years of house arrest for refusing to
acknowledge the religious authority of then-King Hassan II, Islamist
dissident Sheikh Abdessalam Yassine was allowed to leave his Sale home on
May 16. Yassine's release came after a May 10 statement by the
Minister of Interior before Parliament that the Sheikh "leaves and
returns to his residence as he likes." The Minister also stated
that Sheik Yassine was free to take his case to court if he felt his rights
were being abused. Yassine's books, articles, and audio cassettes
were sold only at some bookstores; however, editorials calling for his
release prior to the Government's action were published without impediment
(see Sections 1.d., 2.b., 2.c., and 2.d.).
In May the wire service Agence France Presse and the
French daily newspaper Le Monde reported that Government had banned the
book "Letter from Morocco," which was written by Christine
Serfaty, the wife of former political dissident Abraham Serfaty (who was
allowed to return to Morocco in September 1999 after 8 years of exile and
17 years of imprisonment). According to the two sources, the preface
of Serfaty's book allegedly caused advisors at the Royal Palace to ban its
distribution; the preface referred to Serfaty's collaboration with a French
author on a controversial book, "Notre Ami Le Roi," which has
been banned in Morocco since it was published in 1990 for its criticism of
the rule of then-King Hassan II. In an interview given by Abraham
Serfaty to Jeune Afrique L'Intelligent in September, the former exile
claimed that his wife's book had not been banned, but rather
"bookstores (in Morocco) that would like to import the book still
cannot." In October Christine Serfaty claimed in an interview
with Jeune Afrique L'Intelligent that she did not believe that a banning
was in effect because she had received copies of her book from abroad
through the postal system. However, she said that Moroccan bookstores
that ordered her book still were waiting to receive it from the national
distributor. The distributor reportedly sent the book to the
government agency responsible for reviewing publications before their entry
onto the market. The agency had yet to release the book to the
distributor by year's end.
Also in May, the Government permitted the local
publication and sale of a comic book called "They Even Starve
Rats." Written and illustrated by Abdelaziz Mouride, a former
leftist student whom the authorities arbitrarily detained in 1974,
sentenced to 22 years in prison, and then freed in 1984, the comic book
vividly recounts the torture, injustice, and humiliation that he and other
political dissidents suffered at the hands of the authorities (see Section
1.c.).
Dish antennas permit free access to a wide variety of
foreign broadcasts and are available at low cost on the market. The
antennas are in wide use throughout the country. Residents of the
north are able to receive Spanish broadcasts with standard antennas.
The Government does not impede the reception of foreign broadcasts or
Internet access.
The universities enjoy relative academic freedom in most
areas, but are barred from open debate on the Monarchy, the Western Sahara,
and Islam. Government informers monitor campus activities (see
Section 1.f.) and rectors are approved by the Ministry of Interior.
Police and university students conducting elections clashed violently
during the fall at university campuses throughout the country (see Sections
1.c., 1.e., and 2.b.).
b. Freedom of Peaceful Assembly and Association
The Constitution provides for freedom of assembly;
however, the law also permits the Government to suppress even peaceful
demonstrations and mass gatherings, and at times police forcibly prevented
and disrupted gatherings during the year. Most conferences and
demonstrations require the prior authorization of the Ministry of Interior,
ostensibly for security reasons.
Throughout the year, many meetings and marches took
place peacefully without government interference; however, numerous
demonstrations involving unemployed demonstrators were disrupted by the
Government. Security forces often resorted to violent means to
disperse and prevent from marching unemployed demonstrators, including the
ANDC, the Group 314, disabled unemployed protesters, and other affiliated
groups. Security forces also used violent means to disperse human
rights activists and members of Islamist organizations late in the year.
In early October, the Denmark-based organization EMHRN noted that
"measures inspired by security police are still in existence; force is
being used, outside the law, with protesters and, notably, with unemployed
academics."
During their February 2 operation in the village of
Tarmilet (48 miles from the capital), security forces used force to remove
striking workers who had blockaded a water-bottling factory. The
operation, which involved a large-scale military presence and reportedly
was led by senior military officers, took place after a court order in
January had ruled in favor of the factory owners who charged the protesting
workers with interruption of means of production and obstructing the
freedom to work. Dozens of strikers and members of the security
forces were injured during the operation (see Sections 1.c., 1.d., 1.f.,
2.d., and 6.a.).
On two consecutive days in February, security forces
violently dispersed striking members of Group 314 (unemployed doctoral
graduates of medicine and engineering). Members of Group 314
conducted a sit-in on February 10 at the Ministry of Employment and were
dispersed by charging security forces, who beat the protesters with their
hands, boots, and batons. Police arrested eight protesters, who later
were released without charges. Seven protesters reportedly were
injured. On February 11, approximately 300 members of Group 314
staged a sit-in before the Wilaya (regional office of the Interior
Ministry) of Rabat to demand the release of the 8 members who were arrested
the previous day. Approximately 200 members of the security forces
intervened to disperse the demonstrators, again using violent methods.
This time, police arrested four protesters, who also later were released
without charges. Employment Minister Khalid Alioua denied during a
February 10 press briefing that abusive acts against the group had occurred
(see Sections 1.c. and 1.d.).
On March 1, security forces in the Western Sahara city
of Smara violently dispersed Sahrawi students and their families who were
demonstrating in solidarity with Sahrawi students in the nearby Moroccan
city of Agadir. Police had disrupted violently demonstrations by the
Agadir students on February 28 and 29. The Agadir students were
protesting the December 1999 incarceration of three Sahrawis accused of
spying for the Polisario Front (see Sections 1.b. and 1.d.). The
Sahrawi students and families in Smara organized a march toward the police
station, which security forces subsequently broke up forcefully.
Dozens of persons allegedly were injured, as were a dozen police officers.
According to reports, nobody was arrested during the protest.
Security forces used force to break up a May 3
demonstration in Meknes by members of the ANDC and other unemployed
protesters (see Sections 1.c. and 1.d.).
On May 11, police violently broke up a peaceful
demonstration in front of the Tunisian Embassy, where approximately 50
human rights activists had gathered to protest the Tunisian Government's
treatment of a Tunisian journalist (he was on a hunger strike) and his
family. After issuing an order to cease the demonstrations, police
used force to disperse the activists, pushing them, beating their legs with
batons, tearing up their posters, and pursuing them down side streets.
Police reportedly injured six protesters.
On May 12, at the Ministry of Finance, police used
excessive force to disperse approximately 500 engineers who were preparing
to hold a sit-in to protest their terms of employment. Police used
batons to disperse the protesters, clubbing a regional leader from the
independent Moroccan Workers Union, who was knocked unconscious and
required hospitalization. When the protesters regrouped nearby, the
police again pursued them, and used batons to disperse them. Some
police reportedly entered a ministry building and clubbed innocent
bystanders whom they mistook for protesters. The International
Confederation of Free Trade Unions in Brussels issued a communique that
denounced police for using brutal methods against the protesters and asked
the Government "to work to put an end to brutal attacks against
peaceful trade-union demonstrations." On May 17, the OMDH issued
a communique that strongly criticized the brutal police actions on May 11
and 12, and questioned the Government about "the objective of using
violence against civil society" at a time when royal speeches on human
rights urged a new and more humane relationship of authority between the
Government and citizens.
On May 17 and 18, police violently broke up student
demonstrations in Marrakech, initially detaining 30 to 40 mostly Sahrawi
participants. There were conflicting accounts regarding the origins
of the large-scale demonstriations (see Sections 1.c. and 1.d.).
Within a 1-week period in June, security forces in the
capital used excessive force to break up both a march by unemployed
graduates associated with the ANDC and to evict 12 Group 314 hunger
strikers from UMT's Rabat headquarters. According to eyewitnesses, on
June 13, hundreds of security force members violently stopped up to 4,000
members of the ANDC from staging a protest march at the Parliament.
Security forces used batons, chased protesters down streets, and violently
dispersed large groups of marchers who had gathered before the Parliament.
Thirty-three protesters reportedly were injured during the violent
dispersal, 2 of them seriously. Over 20 persons were arrested, all of
whom later were released without charges. On the evening of June 13,
authorities detained two union leaders not involved in the demonstrations
and released them the following day without charges (see Sections 1.c. and
1.d.).
During the evening of June 18, up to 100 members of the
security forces attacked UMT headquarters in Rabat, where 12 Group 314
members were in the 11th day of a hunger strike. The attack allegedly
began after ANDC demonstrators outside the headquarters threw rocks at
security forces. Security forces then reportedly threw the rocks back
at the demonstrators, breaking windows in the process, and fired tear gas
into the building. They subsequently used force to clear all
demonstrators from the area, arresting up to 100 persons. Security
forces them removed the hunger strikers, who had been forced out by the
tear gas. Later in the evening, the authorities cut the water and
electricity supply to the UMT's headquarters, which they restored the
following morning. Dozens of protesters were injured, some seriously.
Twenty-two of those arrested were charged with "using violence against
agents of authority;" 19 received suspended sentences and 3 received 2
months' imprisonment. Prime Minister Youssoufi convened an
interministerial meeting on June 19 to address the violence and condition
of the unemployed population. The Government stated that it
"affirms its choice of dialog and rejects all forms of pressure and
tension." Justice Minister Azziman then met with some members of
the ANDC. On July 5, the Group 314 hunger strikers ended their 28-day
strike after a meeting with the Government, in which both sides pledged to
engage in a substantive dialog (see Sections 1.c., 1.d., and 1.e.).
On July 26 in downtown Rabat, police violently dispersed
disabled unemployed university graduates, who were protesting the denial of
their right to employment. The protesters arrived in Rabat from
throughout the country to meet the Secretary of State in charge of the
disabled, whom they accused of reneging on promises to assist them.
The police reportedly removed the disabled protesters to the Ain Atiq
detention center, outside the capital. On September 12, police again
used force to break up a protest by approximately 40 disabled graduates
before the Parliament. There were reports of injured protesters and,
according to a communique issued by an association of unemployed
handicapped university graduates, police again removed uninjured
handicapped protesters to the Ain Atiq detention center. Police
reportedly attempted to remove forcibly camera equipment of one
photojournalist covering the demonstration, and jostled and threatened
other news correspondents on the scene. The SNPM issued a communique
criticizing the police treatment of the journalists, claiming that it was
not the first time security forces exhibited such behavior toward them (see
Sections 1.c., 2.a., and 5).
On October 9 in Casablanca, police dispersed with tear
gas 2,000 to 3,000 Islamists who were protesting the Israeli Government's
use of force against Palestinians in Israel, the West Bank, and Gaza in
September and October. Islamist leaders had asked for and were
refused permission to hold the demonstration.
On October 23, security forces used violent means to
break up a demonstration by students preparing to begin a march to protest
transportation problems at Hassan I University in Settat (southeast of
Casablanca). Police intervened when the students were gathering on
the edges of the university for a march toward the Wilaya of Settat.
The police arrested 10 students, some of whom reportedly were not
participating in the march, and accused them of disobedience, inciting
disobedience, violence, and contempt of public servants while exercising
their functions. Numerous students reportedly were injured in the
violence, as well as two policemen. Press reports indicated that
security forces intervened once students belonging to the Justice and
Charity Organization inserted themselves into the march and began chanting
anti-Israeli and anti-American slogans. Security forces reportedly
clubbed students indiscriminately with truncheons, even entering
neighborhood cafes and cafeterias to do so. After two of its youth
members were detained in the incident, the political bureau of the PPS
political party issued a communique on October 27, in which it claimed that
security forces acted with "unprecedented brutality" in pursuing
and attacking students indiscriminately within university grounds and in
neighboring streets, and in conducting "targeted arrests."
At their trial on October 27, the 10 students were sentenced to between 3
and 5 months in prison (three were given suspended sentences); the
students' sentences later were reduced on appeal (see Sections 1.c. and
1.e.).
On November 5, security forces reportedly used violent
force to break up a sit-in by ANDC members in the southern city of Tan-Tan.
The local ANDC branch had called for a march to protest the lack of
employment opportunities in the city, irregularities in the region's hiring
practices, the lack of dialog with the authorities, and the local
governor's abusive treatment of ANDC members. The police reportedly
injured 25 demonstrators, 3 seriously, during the attack.
On November 21, security forces violently clashed with
JCO students at Mohammedia University (in the Casablanca suburbs) as the
latter prepared for annual student elections. According to news
reports, over 100 students were injured and 14 arrested. Police
claimed that they responded because the students illegally remained on
campus overnight and committed acts of vandalism. The students were
sentenced to 2 years' imprisonment and fines ranging from $50 to $150 (500
to 1,500 dirhams) (see Sections 1.c. and 1.e.). Other reports
indicated that similar although less violent clashes occurred between
security forces and JCO students at other university campuses around the
country engaged in student elections.
On November 27, security forces reportedly used violent
means to break up a 5-day sit-in strike at a canning factory in the
southern city of Agadir. The attack reportedly resulted in the death
of one worker and injuries to eight others (see Sections 1.a., 1.c., 1.d.,
and 6.a.).
During the weekend of December 9-11, security forces
throughout the country used violent means to disperse human rights
activists, members of the JCO, and unemployed graduates who gathered
separately in Rabat and other large cities to demonstrate for different
reasons. The three groups decided to gather despite a prior Interior
Ministry statement that the gatherings were unauthorized and would be
forbidden. On December 9, human rights activists from the AMDH and
Forum for Truth and Justice (FMVE) gathered before the Parliament to demand
trials for those responsible for past arbitrary detention, forced
disappearance, and torture. Security forces violently attacked the
demonstrators with truncheons and arrested about 40 persons. Security
forces also reportedly confiscated journalists' photography equipment.
After spending 1 night in jail, 39 of the detained protesters appeared
before the court of first instance in Rabat the following day and were
released that evening. The Government pressed charges against 33 of
the demonstrators; the trial was scheduled for February 2001. The
AMDH's president Abderrahmane Benameur, who was among those arrested and
released, condemned the use of violence by security forces, characterizing
such violence as "a step backward in human rights." On
December 17, the AMDH filed a lawsuit in Rabat's administrative court
against the Government for banning its demonstration. On December 10,
the FIDH issued a communique, in which it expressed its "extreme
concern" regarding the Government's suppression of peaceful
gatherings.
Later during the weekend, in Rabat and other large
cities, security forces again resorted to violent force to break up public
gatherings by members of the JCO. The JCO had called for peaceful
nationwide protests in large cities to demonstrate against the Government's
banning of their newspapers and to demand the legalization of their
organization. At the Rabat train station, security forces used
truncheons to disperse violently assembled JCO members, and arrested dozens
of persons. The authorities again confiscated photography equipment,
including that of demonstrators and of a British Broadcasting Company
journalist. The authorities charged 18 of those detained with holding
an unauthorized demonstration. Their trial was scheduled to take
place in January 2001. Security forces violently dispersed a similar
demonstration in Casablanca on the same day, arresting hundreds of
additional JCO demonstrators; all of the Casablanca demonstrators had been
released by year's end. Of the released demonstrators, 22 were
scheduled to be tried in early 2001.
On December 11, security forces used force to arrest
members of the ANDC who had gathered before the Parliament to protest
against Government inactivity regarding their unemployment. Those
arrested later were released.
During the year, there were no new developments related
to the police excesses in the Western Saharan city of Laayoune in September
and October 1999, in which police used brutal force to break up
demonstrations organized by students, unemployed graduates, miners, and
former Sahrawi political prisoners. Some who were detained during the
police violence were subjected to systematic beatings and other forms of
physical coercion. Most of those detained were released; however, 26
persons were charged and sentenced to between 10 and 15 years in prison on
charges of destruction of property during the protests. Despite
appeals lodged by defense lawyers during the year, none of the sentences
were reduced or overturned.
In the aftermath of the September 1999 protests, King
Mohammed VI immediately replaced the governor of the province, relieved the
local police chief of his duties, and dispatched military security forces
to the city to help restore order. A new royal commission was
dispatched quickly to the city by King Mohammed VI to explain to local
residents proposed new measures to decentralize authority in the region,
which would allow local residents more of a choice in their affairs, and to
propose elections to choose members to a royal advisory council on the
Western Sahara.
Despite these actions taken to restore confidence and
order and to lessen tensions, renewed violence broke out in late October
1999. There were credible reports that police provoked the violence
and there were further credible reports that police authorities unlawfully
entered homes to arrest persons associated with the demonstrations in
September 1999. Thirty-one persons reportedly were detained. Of
these persons, 10 reportedly were released within 24 hours and the
remainder released within the following 2-week period.
No investigation has been initiated into the excessive
use of force by the police, nor have any charges against police been filed.
There also was no progress during the year on local elections to choose
members to the proposed royal advisory council on the Western Sahara.
However, there also were numerous peaceful protests
during the year. For example, on February 4, 60 Sahrawi students
organized a sit-in protest in front of the Ministry of Human Rights to
protest what they claimed to be the illegal detention of 3 Sahrawis who
were detained in December 1999 and accused of espionage activities on
behalf of the Polisario Front (see Sections 1.b. and 1.e.). The
sit-in proceeded peacefully. On February 18 and 19, teachers who were
members of two different trade unions protested without disruption for 2
consecutive days the freezing of family allowances and teacher promotions.
On March 4, hundreds of supporters and members of the NGO Forum for Truth
and Justice, which was created by former political prisoners and their
survivors, staged a sit-in before the notorious Derb Moulay Cherif police
station to demand an accounting for and details regarding over 30 years of
forced disappearance and arbitrary arrest. Police did not intervene.
On March 12, two large rallies took place in Rabat and Casablanca that
collectively involved over 200,000 persons. The march in Rabat was
called by civil society in observance of the international day for women.
The march in Casablanca was a counterdemonstration organized by Morocco's
two major Islamist groups. In spite of the large numbers of
demonstrators and the political sensitivity of the marches, they both
proceeded peacefully and without intervention by security forces (see
Section 5). To protest government inaction on their behalf, 115
members of Group 314 staged a 48-hour hunger strike on March 17 and 18.
The hunger strike proceeded peacefully, without any incidents or
intervention by security forces. On May 3, journalists and human
rights activists peacefully demonstrated in front of the Ministry of
Communication against several cases of press censorship. On October
7, hundreds of former political prisoners, their families, and human rights
activists peacefully demonstrated at Tazmamart, the notorious former secret
detention center. On October 8, several tens of thousands persons
peacefully participated in a march in Rabat led by the Prime Minister to
demonstrate their solidarity with Palestinians.
On November 5, 1999, Prime Minister Youssoufi revoked an
order issued earlier in the year by former Interior Minister Driss Basri to
ban all public meetings from government-owned facilities unless they
otherwise were authorized by the Government. Basri's decision
triggered protests by human rights activists who asserted that such tactics
constituted a serious violation of freedom of expression. Amid the
protests caused by Basri's order, government spokesman Khalid Alioua stated
that the Interior Ministry's decision had been "badly
interpreted," and applied only to meetings in municipal council and
administration buildings, not to the public halls that routinely are used
by unions, parties, NGO's, and other groups.
According to Youssoufi's November 5, 1999 revocation,
only a declaration of a public meeting would be necessary for public
meetings to proceed. However, on November 25, 1999, several weeks
following the Prime Minister's revocation of Basri's order, government
spokesperson Khalid Alioua announced that--in apparent contradiction to the
Prime Minister's revocation--both a declaration and authorization must be
issued before public-venue meetings could proceed. Alioua attributed
the Government's decision to a series of illegal sit-ins and protests in
public spaces that had followed the revocation. Human rights
organizations reacted negatively to the announcement. The OMDH issued
a communique that criticized the decision as illegal. The OMDH cited
the 1958 Public Liberties Code and Youssoufi's November directive in
asserting that a declaration alone suffices to proceed with a public
meeting, and that meetings may be prohibited only if deemed a threat to
public order. Since the Government's November 25 announcement, local
observers generally agree that the authorities indiscriminately apply the
authorization rule, allowing those demonstrations to proceed that it
considers inoffensive.
After violent police suppression of demonstrations in
Rabat in October 1998, Basri agreed in December 1998 to recognize
officially the ANDC, whose request for recognition had been pending for 7
years. Basri also agreed to grant members of the group 5,000 taxi
licenses. Members of the ANDC also were invited by then-King Hassan
II to a national conference on unemployment in December 1998. In June
1999, the Ministers of Interior and Employment toured the regions to
instruct walis (regional and city leaders appointed by the Interior
Ministry) and governors on how to take steps to reduce unemployment, and to
listen to the needs of the unemployed. However, despite repeated
meetings with the Ministers of Interior and Employment, the ANDC has not
obtained official recognition, and the promised taxi licenses have not been
issued.
The Constitution provides for freedom of association;
however, the Government limits this right in practice. Under a 1958
decree, which was amended substantially in 1973 to introduce restrictions
on civil society organizations, persons who wish to create an organization
must obtain the approval of the Ministry of Interior before holding
meetings. In practice the Ministry uses this requirement to prevent
persons suspected of advocating causes opposed by the Government from
forming legal organizations. Historically, extreme Islamist and
leftist groups have encountered the greatest difficulty in obtaining
official approval. Although there are over 20 active Islamist groups,
the Government has prohibited membership in 2, the JCO and Jama'a Islamia,
due to their perceived anti-Monarchy rhetoric. Political parties also
must be approved by the Ministry of Interior, which has used this power to
control participation in the political process. However, individual
Islamists are not barred from participating in recognized political
parties. The last known instance in which a proposed political party
failed to receive such approval was in 1996, when an Islamist group's
application was not approved. The group instead was permitted to
present candidates for the 1997 elections under the banner of an existing
party. One Islamist party, the Party for Justice and Development
(PJD--formerly the Popular Democratic Constitutional Movement), won nine
seats in Parliament in the 1997 elections. In by-elections held in
August, the PJD won two additional seats in Parliament.
During the summer, the Government prevented members of
the JCO from gaining access to campgrounds and beaches for group prayer
sessions, and arrested and jailed some of the group's members (see Sections
1.d., 2.a., 2.c., and 2.d.).
c. Freedom of Religion
The Constitution provides for freedom of religion;
however, only Islam, Christianity, and Judaism are tolerated in practice.
The Constitution provides that Islam is the official religion, and
designates the King as "Commander of the Faithful," with the
responsibility of ensuring "respect for Islam." In 1996 a
small foreign Hindu community received the right to perform cremations and
to hold services, and other foreign communities enjoy similar religious
privileges. However, Baha'is face restrictions on the practice of
their faith. The Government monitors the activities of mosques.
The Government does not license or approve
religions or religious organizations. The Government provides tax
benefits, land and building grants, subsidies, and customs exemptions for
imports necessary for the observance of the major religions.
Islamic law and tradition call for strict punishment for
any Muslim who converts to another faith. Citizens who convert to
Christianity and other religions sometimes face social ostracism, and in
the past a small number have faced short periods of questioning by the
authorities. Voluntary conversion is not a crime under the Criminal
or Civil Codes; however, the authorities have jailed some converts on the
basis of references to Koranic law. Any attempt to induce a Muslim to
convert is illegal. Foreign missionaries either limit their
proselytizing to non-Muslims or conduct their work quietly. The
Government cited the Penal Code prohibition on conversion in most cases in
which courts expelled foreign missionaries.
The Ministry of Islamic Affairs monitors Friday mosque
sermons and the Koranic schools to ensure the teaching of approved
doctrine. The authorities sometimes suppress the activities of
Islamists, but generally tolerate activities limited to the propagation of
Islam, education, and charity. Security forces commonly close mosques
to the public shortly after Friday services to prevent the use of the
premises for unauthorized political activity. The Government strictly
controls authorization to construct new mosques. Most mosques are
constructed using private funds.
After 11 years of house arrest for refusing to
acknowledge the religious authority of then-King Hassan II, Islamist
dissident Sheikh Abdessalam Yassine was allowed to leave his Sale home on
May 16. On May 17, Sheikh Yassine then received at his home leading
council members of his Justice and Charity Organization, attended a Sale
mosque prayer service on May 19, and gave a May 20 press conference that
was attended widely by domestic and foreign media representatives. In
February prior to Sheikh Yassine's release, the Government temporarily
confiscated several newspapers that printed a 19-page memorandum addressed
by Yassine to King Mohammed VI asking for the King to return to
Moroccans the wealth that Yassine alleged the King's late father had stolen
from them. On February 8 and 9, then-Communication Minister Larbi
Messari claimed that the memorandum was not banned, that it was available
on the Internet, and that the concerned newspapers were back in
circulation. Messari stated that the confiscation was
"incidental," and that censorship was absurd and no longer
practiced. Four members of the JCO were arrested in February for
distributing the memorandum in Tangiers and Ben Slimane (near Casablanca).
All four were charged with violating the "sacred institution of the
Monarchy." According to the AMDH, by February 7, the authorities
had dropped the charges and released the four JCO members.
According to press reports in late May and early July,
the authorities allegedly blocked the publication of two newspapers--Al-Adl
Wal Ihsane and Rissalat Al-Futuwa--that were associated with the JCO,
ordering printers to suspend their distribution. Yassine's books,
articles, and audio cassettes were sold only at some bookstores, and
editorials that had called for his release were published without
impediment. The JCO has an active presence on university campuses and
occasionally had organized protests of Yassine's house arrest.
However, prominent members of the JCO are subject to constant surveillance
and sometimes are unable to obtain passports and other necessary documents.
During the summer, the Government prevented members of the JCO from gaining
access to campgrounds and beaches for group prayer sessions, and arrested
and jailed some of the group's members. In August two JCO members
were sentenced to 3 months' imprisonment for their proselytizing activities
on a beach in El-Jadida. During the same month, Interior Minister
Ahmed Midaoui declared before Parliament that "we are one sole nation
and nobody can impose upon others their own vision of Islam," and that
"people go to beaches for recreational purposes and we do not have
Islamic beaches." He also added that "we cannot tolerate
the appearance of sectarianism in our society" (see Sections 1.d.,
2.a., 2.b., and 2.d.).
The teaching of Islam in public schools benefits from
discretionary funding in the Government's annual education budget, as do
other curriculum subjects. The annual budget also provides funds for
religious instruction to the parallel system of Jewish public schools.
The Government has funded several efforts to study the cultural, artistic,
literary, and scientific heritage of Moroccan Jews. In 1998, the
Government created a chair for the study of comparative religions at the
University of Rabat.
Since the time of the French protectorate (1912-1956), a
small foreign Christian community has opened churches, orphanages,
hospitals, and schools without any restriction or licensing requirement
being imposed. Missionaries who conduct themselves in accordance with
societal expectations largely are left unhindered. However, those
whose proselytizing activities become public face expulsion.
The Government permits the display and sale of Bibles in
French, English, and Spanish, but confiscates Arabic-language Bibles and
refuses licenses for their importation and sale, despite the absence of any
law banning such books. Nevertheless, Arabic Bibles reportedly have
been sold in local bookstores. There were no known cases in which
foreigners were denied entry into the country because they were carrying
Christian materials, as occurred in the past.
The small Baha'i community has been forbidden to meet or
participate in communal activities since 1983; however, there were no
reports during the year that the Government summoned members of the Baha'i
Faith for questioning or denied them passports, as had occurred in previous
years.
There are two sets of laws and courts--one for Jews and
one for Muslims--pertaining to marriage, inheritance, and family matters.
The family law courts are run, depending on the law that applies, by
rabbinical and Islamic authorities who are court officials.
Parliament must authorize any changes to those laws. Non-Koranic
sections of Muslim law on personal status are applied to non-Muslim and
non-Jewish persons.
The Government organizes events to encourage tolerance
and respect among religions. In April and May, the Government hosted
the first meeting of the "Traveling Faculty of the Religions of the
Book" at Al-Akhawayn University in Ifrane.
The Government annually organizes in May the "Fez
Festival of Sacred Music," which includes musicians from many
religions. The Government has organized in the past numerous
symposiums among local and international clergy, priests, rabbis, imams and
other spiritual leaders to examine ways to reduce religious intolerance and
to promote interfaith dialog. Each year during the Islamic holy month
of Ramadan, the King hosts colloquiums of Islamic religious scholars to
examine ways to promote tolerance and mutual respect within Islam and
between Islam and other religions.
In late August, the King declared in a nationally
televised speech that 100 mosques throughout the country would be used as
teaching centers to fight illiteracy. In the first (and pilot) year
of the announced program, 10,000 citizens between the ages of 15 and 45
were to receive literacy courses on Islam, civic education, and hygiene.
If successful, the program was expected to be expanded to include a larger
part of the population in subsequent years. The King designated 200
unemployed university graduates to administer the literacy courses during
the program's pilot stage, which began in September.
d. Freedom of Movement Within the Country, Foreign
Travel, Emigration, and Repatriation
The Constitution provides for freedom of movement;
however, the Government restricts this right in certain areas. The
gendarmerie maintains checkpoints throughout the country, at which drivers'
licenses and vehicle registrations are examined for validity.
Although checkpoints have been maintained in the same places for years, the
degree of inspections of motorists has relaxed, while the emphasis on
inspecting trucks and buses continues. In addition while there are
continuing allegations that gendarmes demand small bribes to clear
vehicles, press reports indicate that gendarmes found guilty of such
behavior are punished. In 1998 the Gendarmerie Royale began a
campaign to combat such abuses within its ranks. In the
Moroccan-administered Western Sahara, authorities restrict movement in
areas regarded as militarily sensitive.
The Ministry of Interior restricts freedom to travel
outside the country in certain circumstances. In addition all civil
servants and military personnel must obtain written permission from their
ministries to leave the country. The OMDH and AMDH have compiled
lists of individuals who reportedly have been denied passports or who have
passports but are denied permission to travel. In February the AMDH
reported in the French-language weekly Quotidien du Maroc on 33 past and
previous cases in which the Interior Ministry has blocked the issuance of
passports to former political prisoners. On February 26, the OMDH
issued a communique protesting a lack of governmental action on outstanding
passport cases. The OMDH contended that the Government, in resorting
to arbitrary administrative delays, continues to harass former political
prisoners who seek to resume normal lives. The OMDH also alleged that
some citizens were forbidden by the Government to leave Moroccan territory
during the year. The communique listed no names.
In March the investigative French-language weekly Le
Journal reported on two cases of former leftist political activists and
political prisoners who were unable to renew their passports.
Pardoned in 1992, Abdellah El-Harrif, the national secretary of a far-left
political party unrecognized by the Government, discovered during a
passport-renewal procedure that the authorities have sought his whereabouts
since 1996. Despite numerous inquiries to the Government to determine
the reason behind his particular status, El Harrif reportedly had not
received a response by year's end. However, he remained free to
continue his professional and political life without hindrance, and is free
to travel within the country. El Harrif's deputy, Mostapha Brahma,
reported similar difficulties. Brahma has been without a passport
since 1994, the year of his pardon, and has received no answer from the
Interior Ministry, Human Rights Ministry, or the CCDH regarding the
nonissuance of his passport. According to press reports in November,
a former prisoner who was convicted in 1996 for "threatening the
sacred institution of the monarchy" and freed 3 years later, still was
waiting to receive his passport a year after submitting a passport request.
According to press reports, before, during, and after their February 2
operation in the village of Tarmilet (48 miles from the capital) to remove
striking workers from a water-bottling factory, a reported 1,000 security
forces encircled and sealed off the village. Gendarmes erected
blockades and strictly controlled access to the village. According to
the AMDH, security forces maintained checkpoints near the village well
after the February 2 confrontation with workers. The operation, which
involved a large-scale military presence and reportedly was led by senior
military officers, took place after a court order in January had ruled in
favor of the factory owners, who had charged the protesting workers with
interruption of means of production and obstructing the freedom to work.
Dozens of strikers and members of the security forces were injured during
the operation, in which security forces used rubber bullets, tear gas, and
water cannons to remove strikers and their supporters from the factory and
access areas (see Sections 1.c., 1.d., 1.f., and 2.b.).
After 11 years of house arrest for refusing to
acknowledge the religious authority of then-King Hassan II, Islamist
dissident Sheikh Abdessalam Yassine was permitted to leave his Sale home on
May 16 (see Sections 1.d., 2.a, and 2.c.).
Moroccans may not renounce their citizenship, but the
King retains the power--rarely used--to revoke it. Tens of thousands
of Moroccans hold more than one citizenship and travel on passports from
two or more countries. While in Morocco, they are regarded as
Moroccan citizens. Dual nationals sometimes complain of harassment by
immigration inspectors.
The Government welcomes voluntary repatriation of Jews
who have emigrated. Moroccan Jewish emigres, including those with
Israeli citizenship, freely visit Morocco. The Government also
encourages the return of Sahrawis who have departed Morocco due to the
conflict in the Western Sahara, provided that they recognize the
Government's claim to the region. The Government does not permit
Western Saharan nationalists who have been released from prison to live in
the disputed territory.
The Government cooperates with the U.N. High
Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and other humanitarian organizations in
assisting refugees. While Morocco has from time to time provided
political asylum to individuals, the issue of first asylum never has
arisen. There were no reports of forced expulsion of persons with a
valid claim to refugee status.
Section 3 Respect for Political Rights: The
Right of Citizens to Change their Government
Constitutional provisions establishing periodic free
elections notwithstanding, citizens do not have the full right to change
their government. The King, as head of state, appoints the Prime
Minister, who is the titular head of government. Constitutional
changes in 1992, retained in the Constitution of 1996, authorize the Prime
Minister to nominate all government ministers, but the King has the power
to replace any minister at will. The Parliament has the theoretical
ability to effect change in the system of government. However, the
Constitution may not be changed without the King's approval. The
Ministry of Interior appoints the provincial governors and local caids
(district administrative officials). Municipal and regional councils
are elected.
The Government of Prime Minister Abderrahmane Youssoufi
is the first government formed from the political opposition since the late
1950's, and his 1998 appointment by then-King Hassan II marked a
significant step toward increased democratization. With the support
of the Monarchy, Youssoufi, who was sentenced to death in absentia in the
1970's but subsequently received a royal pardon in 1980, has declared his
intention to modernize the administrative and judicial structures and to
liberalize the economic and political system. Of the 41 cabinet-level
posts in the Government that Youssoufi appointed in 1998, only 4 posts
(Interior, Foreign Affairs, Justice, and Islamic Affairs) plus the
Secretary General of the Government and the Minister-Delegate for Defense
Administration were filled by holdovers from the former Government.
In 1999 King Mohammed VI replaced one of the four holdovers, Interior
Minister Driss Basri. In order to develop reforms, the King granted
cabinet ministers a greater degree of responsibility for the management of
their individual portfolios. In September Prime Minister Youssoufi
consolidated his Cabinet to include fewer ministerial areas of
responsibility. The Government now consists of 33 cabinet-level
posts, but still contains 6 "sovereign" ministerial posts
directly appointed by the King (Interior, Foreign Affairs, Justice, Islamic
Affairs, Defense Administration, and Secretary General of the Government).
Morocco created a bicameral legislature in 1997.
Fourteen parties have members in Parliament, and 7 are represented in the
governing coalition. While opposition parties urged in 1996 and 1997
that all members of Parliament be elected directly by the citizenry,
then-King Hassan II proposed in 1996 the creation of a bicameral
legislature, in which all members of the lower house would be elected
through universal suffrage and the upper house by various regional, local,
and professional councils.
In June 1997, Morocco held municipal council elections,
followed by balloting for regional professional councils. In the wake
of the June 1997 elections, political parties accused each other of
manipulation and vote-buying, and claimed government intervention on behalf
of candidates. The Election Commission examined numerous petitions
during the course of the electoral season in 1997 and recommended the
reversal of over 60 municipal election results, including in Tangier,
Khoribga, and Oujda, noted irregularities in four parliamentary races in
Casablanca, Chefchaouen, and Fez, and called for the results to be set
aside. The OMDH criticized the prominent role of the Interior
Ministry in the June 1997 elections, as well as the numerous allegations of
vote-buying, both by the Government and political parties, electoral list
manipulation by the Government, and electoral card falsification.
In August 1997, then-King Hassan II convoked a special
session of Parliament to ratify two laws creating a bicameral assembly,
and, in the same month, Parliament unanimously approved these laws, which
created a 325-seat lower house, the Chamber of Representatives, to be
filled by direct elections, and a 270-seat upper house, the Chamber of
Deputies, whose members would be elected by various directly elected
professional and regional councils. There were widespread, credible
allegations of vote-buying and government manipulation in the November 1997
legislative elections. The fraud and government pressure tactics led
most independent observers to conclude that the election results were
heavily influenced, if not predetermined, by the Government. All
opposition parties criticized the Government, and some called for a boycott
of Parliament. Two winners renounced their seats, alleging
unsolicited government interference on their behalf. The Election
Commission concurred that irregularities had occurred in two Casablanca
cases and recommended that new elections be held in those districts.
After a long appeals process initiated by the losers of the seats, new
elections for the seats were held on August 31, as well as elections for
four other seats throughout the country. The new elections followed
the formal invalidation of the six 1997 election results throughout the
year by the Constitutional Council. Press reports indicate that the
August 31 by-elections overall proceeded more fairly than in 1997, despite
allegations that two of the races involved some cases of vote-buying.
Also in August, the Constitutional Council invalidated an additional
by-election held in the Casablanca-Mechouar district in June that allegedly
involved vote-buying. Despite the invalidations by the Constitutional
Council throughout the year, the body continued to attract criticism for
the alleged slow pace of its deliberations.
On September 15, Morocco held indirect elections to
replace, for the first time since the body's inception, one third of the
270 seats in the Chamber of Counselors. After the polls had closed,
Interior Minister Midaoui reported in a nationally televised press
conference that various political parties had engaged in vote-buying and
fraud. Criticizing the electoral corruption, Minister Midaoui claimed
that his ministry had done everything it could to prevent fraudulent
practices, including conducting investigations into 108 cases, at least 26
of which the Interior Ministry was certain involved fraud. The
Interior Minister also reported that the Ministry had turned the cases over
to the Justice Ministry for further action, and that the Government
"is going to do its duty." However, by year's end, few of
the cases involving electoral fraud had been presented before the courts
and prosecuted. According to press reports, the Constitutional
Council also had received several hundred grievances relating to the
election from throughout the country.
Women are underrepresented in government and politics.
There is 1 female minister delegate in the 33-member Cabinet. There
are no women among the 325 members of the Chamber of Representatives, and
only one woman in the 270-seat Chamber of Counselors. Women occupy
only 84 out of 22,000 seats (or .34 percent) of local communal councils
throughout the country.
In March for the first time in the country's history,
King Mohammed VI appointed a female royal counselor. In August the
King also appointed a woman to head the National Office of Oil Research and
Exploration, an office created as part of the Government's efforts to
exploit newly discovered hydrocarbon reserves in the east. In
September the King confirmed the first-ever female ministerial appointment;
she is to be responsible for a newly reorganized ministry overseeing the
status of women, the first time a ministry has been charged explicitly with
the issue. In October the King appointed the first woman to head the
National Office of Tourism.
Section 4 Governmental Attitude Regarding
International and Nongovernmental Investigation of Alleged Violations of
Human Rights
There are three nationally organized and officially
recognized nongovernmental human rights groups: The Moroccan
Organization for Human Rights, the Moroccan League for the Defense of Human
Rights (LMDDH), and the Moroccan Association for Human Rights. A
fourth group, the Committee for the Defense of Human Rights (CDDH), was
formed in 1992 by former AMDH members. There are also numerous
regional human rights organizations. The Government maintains close
and collaborative relations with all of these groups.
Founded in the 1979 and 1988, respectively, the AMDH and
OMDH have spent years struggling to end human rights abuses. During
this time, they were subjected to harassment and restrictions by the
Government. Some of their former leaders now occupy high posts in the
Youssoufi Government, particularly in the human rights field. In May
the Government accorded the two organizations "public utility"
status, which confers organizations financial benefits as recognition of
their serving the public interest.
In October the OMDH hosted a regional congress on
protecting human rights defenders and promoting democracy in the Arab
world. The congress was attended by Arab jurists and the Human Rights
Minister. The congress called for constitutional reforms throughout
the Arab world that would protect democracy and ensure public freedoms.
During the weekend of December 9-11, security forces
throughout the country used violent means to disperse human rights
activists, members of the JCO, and unemployed graduates who separately
gathered in Rabat and other large cities to demonstrate for different
reasons. On December 9, human rights activists from the AMDH and FMVE
gathered before the Parliament to demand trials for those responsible for
past arbitrary detention, forced disappearance, and torture. Security
forces violently attacked the demonstrators with truncheons and arrested
about 40 persons. Security forces also reportedly confiscated
journalists' photography equipment. After spending 1 night in jail,
39 of the detained protesters appeared before the court of first instance
in Rabat the following day and were released that evening. The
Government pressed charges against 33 of the demonstrators; the trial was
scheduled for February 2001. The AMDH's president, Abderrahmane
Benameur, who was among those arrested and released, condemned the use of
violence by security forces, characterizing such violence as "a step
backward in human rights." On December 17, the AMDH filed a
lawsuit in Rabat's administrative court against the Government for banning
its demonstration. On December 10, the FIDH issued a communique in
which it expressed its "extreme concern" regarding the
Government's suppression of peaceful gatherings (see Sections 1.c., 1.d.,
1.e., 2.a., and 2.b.).
Two new prominent national human rights NGO's, the FMVE
and the ONPM, were formed in 1999. Created by victims of forced
disappearance and surviving family members, the FMVE's principal goal is to
encourage the Government to address openly the issue of past forced
disappearances and arbitrary detention. It also lobbies for
reparations for former political prisoners that extend beyond financial
compensation. Created by lawyers, doctors, journalists, former
inmates, and entertainment personalities, the ONPM's main purpose is
improving the treatment and living conditions of prisoners. ONPM also
supports penal reform efforts. Both the FMVE and the ONPM maintained
collaborative relations and fairly regular contact with government
authorities throughout the year.
In March the Moroccan Barrister's Association opened a
human rights center in Rabat. The Human Rights Minister and other
government officials attended its opening. The barrister's
association plans to use the center to train lawyers in human rights laws
and standards. The center is to undertake studies on reforming
existing legal texts to ensure harmonization with international human
rights conventions. Additionally, the center intends to track and
monitor court cases and verdicts with human rights implications.
On December 8, the Government signed an agreement with
the Democratic Association of Moroccan Women (ADFM) to cooperate on gender
equality programs.
Amnesty International has local chapters in Rabat,
Casablanca, and Marrakech. These chapters participate in AI
international letter-writing campaigns involving issues outside Morocco.
In September AI held a national youth forum outside the capital that
focused on human rights awareness training and children's rights. The
Government hosted a visit by AI secretary general Pierre Sane in June 1999,
during which Sane met with senior government officials and announced that
AI would consider Morocco as a site for a regional office and would hold
its International Congress in Marrakech later that year. However,
later in June 1999, articles in the French and domestic press reported that
the Government had decided not to host the conference, allegedly because of
fears that AI delegates would organize protests in Rabat concerning the
human rights situation in the Western Sahara. The conference was not
held. Amnesty International chose Lebanon as the site for its
regional office, which opened in the fall.
In the latter part of the year, the Government and
Amnesty International discussed and signed two cooperation agreements on
human rights education and public awareness. In September Human
Rights Minister Aujjar received an Amnesty International delegation from
Norway, which presented a draft 10-year program on cooperation for the
country's new focus on human rights education. Amnesty International
and the Government still were negotiating an official agreement on the
draft program at year's end. The Government and the Moroccan chapter
of Amnesty International signed a similar cooperation agreement on a human
rights public awareness program on December 9, the 52nd anniversary of the
U.N. Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
According to the MAP news agency, the Paris-based
International Federation of Human Rights Leagues decided in March to hold
its next world congress in Morocco, reportedly because of the country's
progress in the area of human rights. FIDH officials visited the
country in January to meet with Human Rights Minister Mohammed Aujjar,
Prime Minister Youssoufi, and other government officials, and to discuss
preparations for the congress, which was scheduled to take place in January
2001. The FIDH's world congress reportedly is the first to be held by
an international human rights organization in the Arab world.
In Cairo in March, the Arab League Council chose the Moroccan academic and
jurist Khalid Naciri as the next president of the Arab Commission for Human
Rights. Naciri is to occupy the post for 2 years, heading the
commission's review of human rights questions in the Arab world.
Naciri was a founding member of the OMDH and once served as its president.
In October at its general assembly session held in
Cairo, the Arab Human Rights Organization (OADH) elected two Moroccans to
serve 3-year posts on the organization's Council of Secretaries. The
two Moroccans also are active members of the OMDH. Also in October,
the International Committee of the Red Cross, in collaboration with the
Ministry of National Education and Boston University, conducted a pilot
program to introduce the teaching of international humanitarian law to
educators. The program is part of the Government's current efforts to
reform the education system, including by integrating the teaching of human
rights into the national curriculum.
In April U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Mary
Robinson visited the country to attend an international conference on
national human rights institutions and to open a U.N.-sponsored human
rights information center. During her visit, her second in as many
years, Robinson said that while there still were problems to resolve,
particularly with respect to unemployment and the plight of women, the
country had achieved "significant progress" in human rights
during the past 2 years.
At the end of her stay, Robinson inaugurated the opening
of a center for human rights documentation, training, and information.
Cosponsored by the Human Rights Ministry, the U.N. Commission on Human
Rights, and the U.N. Development Program, the center is intended to operate
as an independent entity and to provide a framework for dialog between
governmental and nongovernmental bodies concerned with human rights.
The center's work is to be directed toward persons involved in the
application and implementation of laws related to human rights, including
police officers, judges, lawyers, and representatives of human rights
advocacy NGO's.
Prime Minister Youssoufi chairs a human rights
commission that reviews cases of past and present human rights issues.
The commission is composed of members of the Government, including the
Ministers of Justice, Human Rights, and Interior.
The Royal Consultative Council on Human Rights, a
10-year-old advisory body to the King, counsels the Palace on human rights
issues, and was the organization charged by the King to resolve cases
related to persons who had disappeared. The CCDH is composed of five
working groups responsible for promoting the protection of human rights.
They include groups on penal law; prison conditions; communications with
human rights NGO's; inhuman conditions of refugees in Polisario-controlled
camps in Tindouf, Algeria; and economic, social, and cultural rights.
In his annual Throne Day speech on July 30 and again in a December 9 speech
before the CCDH in commemoration of the 52nd anniversary of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, King Mohammed announced plans to reform the
Council's structures, responsibilities, and working methods. Critics
of the CCDH welcomed the King's announcements on the recomposition of the
Council, which they have long maintained lacks true independence and the
political will to address openly and fairly sensitive human rights issues.
None of the announced reforms of the CCDH had been instituted by year's
end.
Throughout the year, the Human Rights Ministry held
human rights awareness training sessions with educators and some police
personnel. The sessions were directed at school inspectors at both
the primary and secondary school levels. Up to 75 additional such
training sessions are planned; the inspectors in turn are expected to
transfer the training to teachers for integration into their teaching
programs. Officials at the Human Rights Ministry state that some
police officers and other enforcement officials also are being trained.
The Government increased efforts to introduce human rights as a core
subject of the national school curriculum during the year; in September
Human Rights Minister Aujjar stated that the Government planned to
establish an experimental phase-in program during the 2000-2001 school
cycle, with plans for human rights to become a core component of the
national curriculum within the next 2 years.
In September the country cohosted a human rights
training seminar for representatives of Arab governments and
nongovernmental organizations in the Arab world. The seminar included
discussions on education in human rights, education in democracy, and the
rights of women in the Arab world.
In January the Human Rights Ministry announced its
intention to open, in collaboration with the Moroccan Barristers
Association, a network of support centers charged with providing legal and
psychological assistance to needy citizens. Targeted at children and
women who have suffered physical or psychological violence, the centers are
to be staffed by doctors, lawyers, psychologists, and teachers.
Officials at the Human Rights Ministry say that the Ministry also intends
to involve the participation of police officers at the centers. The
primary mission of the centers is to provide quick, effective, and direct
assistance to those in difficult situations, with an emphasis on clients'
legal rights. The centers were scheduled to open in early 2001.
Also in January, Mohamed Said Saadi, then-Secretary of
State for Social Protection, the Family, and Children, announced his
department's plans, in collaboration with the European Union, to open a
national center dealing with women's issues. The center would provide
training, documentation, and information on women's issues. Saadi
also announced the creation of bureaus within government ministries that
would be responsible for overseeing the respect for equal employment and
promotion opportunities for women.
At the end of October, the Ministry of Human Rights
hosted a conference in Rabat on "Human Rights, Cultural Identities and
Social Cohesion in the Mediterranean Region," which represented a
follow-up to a dialog initiated in 1995. Attended by Morocco's human
rights community and European leaders, such as former Portuguese President
Mario Soares and former Spanish Prime Minister Felipe Gonzalez, the 2-day
conference focused on issues in the Mediterranean region such as human
rights, migration, culture, and the impact of economic development on human
rights.
Section 5 Discrimination Based on Race, Sex,
Religion, Disability, Language, or Social Status
Although the Constitution states that all citizens are
equal, non-Muslims and women face discrimination in the law and traditional
practice.
Women
Spousal violence is common. Although a battered
wife has the right to file a complaint with the police, as a practical
matter she would do so only if prepared to bring criminal charges.
While physical abuse is a legal ground for divorce, a court only grants it
if the woman is able to provide two witnesses to the abuse. Even
medical certificates are not sufficient. If the court finds against
the woman, she is returned to her husband's home. Consequently, few
women report abuses to the authorities.
The Criminal Code provides for severe punishment for men
convicted of rape or sexually assaulting a woman or a girl. The
defendants in such cases bear the burden of proving their innocence.
However, sexual assaults often go unreported because of the stigma attached
to the loss of virginity. While not provided for by law, victims'
families may offer rapists the opportunity to marry their victims in order
to preserve the honor of the family. The law is more lenient toward
men with respect to crimes committed against their wives; for example, a
light sentence may be accorded a man who murders his wife after catching
her in the act of adultery. However, "honor crimes," a
euphemism that refers to violent assaults with intent to commit murder
against a female for her perceived immodest or defiant behavior, are
extremely rare.
In February local police in the city of Azrou in the
Middle Atlas region, initiated an operation against prostitution, which
resulted in a series of arrests of prostitute, arraignments of brothel
leaders, and closings of brothels that previously had been tolerated (see
Section 6.f.).
Women suffer various forms of legal and cultural
discrimination. The civil-law status of women is governed by the Code
of Personal Status (sometimes referred to as the "Moudouwana"),
which is based on the Malikite school of Islamic law. Although the
Code of Personal Status was reformed in 1993, women's groups still complain
of unequal treatment, particularly under the laws governing marriage,
divorce, and inheritance.
In order to marry, a woman generally is required to
obtain the permission of her "tuteur," or legal guardian, usually
her father. Only in rare circumstances may she act as her own
"tuteur."
It is far easier for a man to divorce his wife than for
a woman to divorce her husband. Under Islamic law and tradition,
rather than asking for a divorce, a man simply may repudiate his wife
outside of court. Under the 1993 reforms to the Code of Personal
Status, a woman's presence in court is required in order for her husband to
divorce her, although women's groups report that this law frequently is
ignored. However, human rights activists reported that in one
NGO-sponsored test in the late 1990's, officials refused to order a divorce
without the wife being present, despite offers of bribes.
Nevertheless, women's groups complain that men resort to ruses to evade the
new legal restrictions. The divorce may be finalized even over the
woman's objections, although in such cases the court grants her unspecified
allowance rights.
A woman seeking a divorce has few practical
alternatives. She may offer her husband money to agree to a divorce
(known as a khol'a divorce). The husband must agree to the divorce
and is allowed to specify the amount to be paid, without limit.
According to women's groups, many men pressure their wives to pursue this
kind of divorce. A woman also may file for a judicial divorce if her
husband takes a second wife, if he abandons her, or if he physically abuses
her. However, divorce procedures in these cases are lengthy and
complicated. In November 1998, the Minister of Islamic Affairs
proposed the institutionalization of additions to the basic marriage
contract that would outline the rights and duties agreed upon between
husband and wife and permit legal recourse for the enforcement of the
contract.
Under the Criminal Code, women generally are accorded
the same treatment as men, but this is not the case for family and estate
law, which is based on the Code of Personal Status. Under the Code of
Personal Status, women inherit only half as much as male heirs.
Moreover, even in cases in which the law provides for equal status,
cultural norms often prevent a woman from exercising those rights.
For example, when a woman inherits property, male relatives may pressure
her to relinquish her interest.
While many well-educated women pursue careers in law,
medicine, education, and government service, few make it to the top
echelons of their professions. Women constitute approximately 35
percent of the work force, with the majority in the industrial, service,
and teaching sectors. In 1998 the Government reported that the
illiteracy rate for women was 67 percent (83 percent in rural areas),
compared with 41 percent for men (50 percent in rural areas). Women
in rural areas suffer the most from inequality. Rural women perform
difficult physical labor. Girls are much less likely to be sent to
school than are boys, especially in rural areas, where the quality of
schooling is inferior to urban areas and demands on girls' time for
household chores often prevent school attendance. Some families also
keep girls at home because of rural schools' lack of facilities.
However, women who do earn secondary school diplomas have equal access to
university education.
The Government and the King continued to promote their
proposal to reform the Personal Status Code in order to advance women's
rights. Islamists and some other traditional segments of society
firmly opposed the proposal, especially with respect to its more
controversial elements, such as reform of women's legal status in marriage
and family law issues. On March 12, an estimated 50,000 demonstrators
marched peacefully in Rabat in observance of the International Day for
Women and in support of political reform in the area of women's rights.
On the same day, Islamist groups organized a peaceful counterdemonstration
in Casablanca that drew an estimated 150,000 to 200,000 persons protesting
such reform (see Section 2.b.). In October the Denmark-based
Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Network repeated concerns expressed by
domestic civil society organizations late in the year about the future of
the proposal to reform the Personal Status Code. According to the
EMHRN, the plan to integrate women into the development process that the
Government prepared in its discussions with civil society "has been
pushed to one side."
According to press reports and reliable sources, in
early July, an unspecified number of imams of state-administered mosques
sermonized against the social work of Aicha Ech-Chenna, president of the
NGO Feminine Solidarity, and attacked her character; during prayer
services, one of these imams allegedly threatened Ech-Chenna.
Ech-Chenna's NGO primarily focuses on encouraging the social reintegration
of marginalized and abandoned single mothers with illegitimate children.
Some opposed to Ech-Chenna's work have characterized it as encouraging
prostitution. After the reported attack on Ech-Chenna's character and
other threats, a group of domestic NGO's issued a communique in late July
that criticized "any attempt to use religion and mosques to subdue the
voice of women." The communique also held the Government
primarily "responsible for anything that occurs within mosques."
According to reliable sources, the Ministry of Islamic Affairs took
disciplinary actions against the imam who had threatened Ech-Chenna,
stripping him of his position and removing him from the mosque. In
early November, at the beginning of the third annual "Solidarity
Campaign" to help impoverished and needy citizens, the King decorated
Ech-Chenna for her social work.
In January Mohamed Said Saadi, then-Secretary of State
for Social Protection, the Family, and Children, announced his department's
plans, in collaboration with the European Union, to open a national center
dealing with women's issues. The center would provide training,
documentation, and information on women's issues. Saadi also
announced the creation of bureaus within government ministries that would
be responsible for overseeing the respect for equal employment and
promotion opportunities (See Section 4). The national center was
scheduled to open in Rabat in early 2001.
According to a 1997 government survey, 76 NGO's work to
advance women's rights and to promote women's issues. Among these are
the Democratic Association of Moroccan Women, the Union for Women's Action,
and the Moroccan Association for Women's Rights, which advocate enhanced
political and civil rights, as well as numerous NGO's that provide shelters
for battered women, teach women basic hygiene, family planning, and child
care, and educate illiterate women.
Children
The law provides for compulsory education for children
between the ages of 7 and 13; however, not all children between these ages
attend school due to family decisions and shortfalls in government
resources, and the Government does not enforce the law. The
Government conducts an annual campaign to vaccinate children against
childhood diseases.
The Government has had difficulty addressing the problem
of child labor (see Section 6.d.). Young girls in particular are
exploited as domestic servants. Teenage prostitution in urban centers
has been estimated in the thousands by NGO activists (see Section 6.f.).
The clientele consists of both foreign tourists and citizens. More
young girls than boys are involved; however, young boys also work as
prostitutes (see Section 6.f.). The practice of adoptive servitude,
in which urban families employ young rural girls and use them as domestic
servants in their homes, is prevalent. Credible reports of physical
and psychological abuse in such circumstances are widespread. Some
orphanages have been charged as knowing accomplices in the practice.
More often parents of rural girls "contract" their daughters to
wealthier urban families and collect the salaries for their work as maids.
Adoptive servitude is accepted socially, is unregulated by the Government,
and has only recently begun to attract public criticism. However, at
the end of the year, the Moroccan UNICEF chapter and the National
Observatory of Children's Rights (ONDE), presided by Princess Lalla Meryem,
began a human rights awareness campaign regarding the plight of child
maids. The campaign received widespread and extensive media exposure,
including coverage in official publications.
Another problem facing orphans of both sexes is their
lack of civil status. Civil status is necessary to obtain a birth
certificate, passport, or marriage license. In general men are
registered at local government offices; their wives and unmarried children
are included in this registration, which confers civil status. If a
father does not register his child, the child is without civil status and
the benefits of citizenship. It is possible for an individual to
self-register; however, the process is long and cumbersome. While any
child, regardless of parentage, may be registered within a month of birth,
a court order is required if registration does not take place in that time.
Abandoned children sometimes receive kafala (state-sponsored care).
Several NGO's, including the Bayti Association and the
Moroccan League for the Protection of Children, work to improve legal
protection for children and to help at-risk children. In December the
French Government awarded Najat Mjid, Bayti's president of 17 years,
France's prestigious Human Rights Award in recognition of her activism on
behalf of Moroccan children. Also in December, the United Nations
nominated Mjid for the post of Special Rapporteur on the Traffic and
Exploitation of Children. There are several shelters in the major
cities that provide food and lodging for street children, while other NGO's
work to reduce the exploitation of street children and to cure those street
children with drug addictions.
People with Disabilities
A high incidence of disabling disease, especially polio,
has resulted in a correspondingly high number of disabled persons.
Current statistics from the Government estimate the number of disabled
persons in Morocco at 2.2 million, or 7 percent of the population.
While the Ministry of Social Affairs attempts to integrate the disabled
into society, in practice this is left largely to private charities.
The annual budget for the ministerial department in charge of disabled
affairs is only .01 percent of the overall annual budget. Even
nonprofit special-education programs are priced beyond the reach of most
families. Typically, disabled persons are supported by their
families; some survive by begging. The Government continued a pilot
training program for the blind sponsored in part by a member of the royal
family. In March the Government created a special commission for the
integration of the disabled, presided over by Prime Minister Youssoufi.
The commission is responsible for developing programs that facilitate
societal integration of disabled persons. Also in March, the
Government organized a "National Day of the Disabled," which is
aimed at increasing public awareness of issues affecting the disabled.
On March 30, King Mohammed VI visited a center for disabled children in the
Khemisset province and donated $720,000 (7,200,000 dirhams) to a project to
expand the center's activities. There are no laws mandating physical
changes to buildings to facilitate access by the disabled.
On July 26 and again on September 12, police used force
to break up protests by disabled, unemployed university graduates (see
Sections 1.c., 2.a., and 2.b.).
National/Racial/Ethnic Minorities
The Constitution affirms, and the Government respects,
the legal equality of all citizens. The official language is Arabic.
Both French and Arabic are used in the news media and educational
institutions. Science and technical courses are taught in French,
thereby precluding the large, monolingual-Arabic-speaking population from
participation in such programs. Educational reforms in the past
decade have stressed the use of Arabic in secondary schools. Failure
to transform the university system to a similar extent has led to the
disqualification of many students from higher education in lucrative
fields. This especially is true among the poor, for whom French
training is not always affordable.
About 60 percent of the population claim Berber
heritage. Berber cultural groups contend that Berber
traditions and the Berber language (which consists of three dialects)
rapidly are being lost. Their repeated requests to King Hassan II to
permit the teaching of Berber languages in the schools led to a 1995 royal
speech authorizing the necessary curriculum changes; however, such changes
have not been implemented. Official media broadcast in the Berber
language for limited periods each day.
In 1996 a number of Berber associations issued a
communique petitioning the Government to recognize their language as an
official language and to acknowledge their culture as a part of Moroccan
society. These associations claimed that the Government refuses to
register births for children with traditional Berber names, discourages the
public display of the Berber alphabet, limits the activities of Berber
associations, and continues to Arabize the names of towns, villages, and
geographic landmarks. The Government thus far has made no response to
the petition, although Prime Minister Youssoufi acknowledged Berber culture
as an integral part of Moroccan identity in a speech before Parliament in
1998. A full page of a major national newspaper is devoted on a
monthly basis to articles and poems on Berber culture, which are printed in
the Berber language, although with Latin script.
On March 14, the Government prevented a sit-in before
the Parliament by two Berber NGO's, Tamaynout and the Moroccan Association
for Research and Cultural Exchange(AMREC). The two NGO's filed a
declaration for the sit-in on March 13; however, they received a letter
later the same day from the Wali of Rabat banning the sit-in on the grounds
that it threatened public order and security.
In late 1999, Tamaynout published a report on violations
of the cultural rights of Berber. As evidence the report cited the
refusal of the authorities to recognize Berber names and to use the Berber
language in commercial advertisements, and threats by the authorities of
physical abuse if shop owners displayed such advertisements in their
establishments. According to Tamaynout, Massinisa, a related NGO
based in Tangiers, was contacted by government authorities and threatened
on the evening before its congress. The report also stated that the
government television channel 2M did not broadcast any Berber-language
programs, despite the fact that Berbers pay taxes for the channel in the
form of payments for other government-provided services. In its
report, Tamaynout asked for government recognition of the Berber language
and an end to harassment of Berber associations.
Section 6 Worker Rights
a. The Right of Association
Although workers are free to establish and join trade
unions, the unions themselves are not completely free from government
interference. About half a million of the country's 9 million workers
are unionized in 17 trade union federations. Three federations
dominate the labor scene: The Union Marocaine du Travail (UMT), the
Confederation Democratique du Travail (CDT), and the Union Generale des
Travailleurs Marocains (UCTM). The UMT has no political party
affiliation. The CDT is affiliated with the ruling Socialist Union of
Popular Forces of Prime Minister Youssoufi, and the UGTM with the Istiqlal
party, the second partner in the ruling coalition. It is widely
believed that the Ministry of Interior has informants within the unions who
monitor union activities and the election of officers. Sometimes
union officers are subject to government pressure. Union leadership
does not always uphold the rights of members to select their own leaders.
There has been no case of the rank and file voting out its current
leadership and replacing it with another.
Workers have the right to strike and do so. Work
stoppages normally are intended to advertise grievances and last 24 to 72
hours or less. In May a report by the International Labor
Organization (ILO) noted that there were allegations of violations of the
right of association and threats to freedom of opinion and speech.
The report cited arrests and jailings of union members as examples of
violations of the right of association. The report also noted
allegations that the Government hampered collective bargaining by its civil
servants.
In addition to numerous short-term strikes intended to
highlight grievances, there were a number of narrowly focused work
stoppages during the year. During a February 2 operation in the
village of Tarmilet (48 miles from the capital), security forces used
force, including rubber bullets, tear gas, and water cannons, to remove
striking workers who had blockaded a water bottling factory to protest
layoffs of temporary workers. The operation, which involved a
large-scale military presence and reportedly was led by senior military
officers, took place after a court order in January had ruled in favor of
the factory owners, who charged the protesting workers with interruption of
means of production and obstructing the freedom to work. Dozens of
strikers and members of the security forces were injured during the
operation. Security forces also reportedly arrested random passersby
in addition to more than a dozen factory workers. According to
sources in the Government, the workers and passersby later were released
without charge. The Democratic Confederation of Workers trade union,
which is aligned politically with the ruling USFP party, reported that
security forces also detained two of its regional delegates 2 weeks after
the February 2 incident. The two officials reportedly were freed by
royal pardon on May 1 (Moroccan Labor Day) while an investigation into the
incident was still ongoing. The owner of the factory and others
involved in the incident reportedly claimed that security forces resorted
to force only after the protesters initiated violence against unarmed
police (see Sections 1.c., 1.d., 1.f., 2.b., and 2.d.).
Arrested and jailed on charges of forming a criminal gang and setting a
vehicle on fire during a national truckers strike in June 1999, Sadok El
Kihal, a trucker and regional bureau member of the UGTM, contacted the AMDH
after his May 4 release with accusations that he had been arrested, jailed,
tortured, and falsely convicted by authorities (see Sections 1.c., 1.d.,
and 1.e.).
On November 27, security forces reportedly used violent
means to break up a 5-day sit-in strike at a canning factory in the
southern city of Agadir. The attack reportedly resulted in the death
of one worker and injuries to eight others. Conflicting reports
attributed the death to either police abuse or "natural causes."
There were confirmed reports that police arrested 21 of the strikers, 17 of
whom were women, and ransacked the striking workers' dormitories inside the
canning facility. All but one of the strikers later was released.
The strikers were protesting their employer's alleged negligence in failing
to pay its social security contributions. According to press reports,
the striking personnel reportedly obeyed Labor Code regulations in filing
an intent-to-strike notification 5 days before the November 22 strike.
Members of the striking workers' trade union and politicians affiliated
with it called on the Prime Minister to initiate an immediate investigation
into the incident and free those detained. According to the workers'
trade union, within 1 week after the incident, the cannery already had
hired 60 new workers to replace the strikers.
In August during labor unrest near Casablanca, the
nephew of a private transportation company owner drove a bus into a crowd
of striking workers, killing 3 persons and wounding 12, in an attempt to
end the occupation and obstruction of the company's bus depot. The
workers were demonstrating to have their salaries increased to the level of
the new national minimum wage and to compel the company to make its
contributions to the national social security administration, as required
by law. Government security forces arrested the nephew and son of the
owner, the owner himself, and local thugs the company allegedly hired to
intimidate the strikers. The owner's daughter also was charged in the
case. An investigation into the affair was opened, and the Palace
announced that it would offer $ 10,000 (100,000 dirhams) to the families of
each of the victims. The AMDH and the OMDH issued a joint press
release encouraging the Government to ensure due process and enforce the
rule of law. Union leaders sent a letter to the King and the Cabinet
criticizing the attack and seeking their intervention to salvage
labor-management relations throughout the country. There were no
further developments in the ongoing investigation by year's end.
Unions may sue to have labor laws enforced, and
employers may sue unions when they believe that unions have overstepped
their authority.
Unions belong to regional labor organizations and
maintain ties with international trade union secretariats. The UMT is
a member of the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions.
b. The Right to Organize and Bargain Collectively
The right to organize and bargain collectively is
implied in the constitutional provisions on the right to strike and the
right to join organizations. Trade union federations compete among
themselves to organize workers. Any group of eight workers may
organize a union and a worker may change union affiliation easily. A
work site may contain several independent locals or locals affiliated with
more than one labor federation.
In general the Government ensures the observance of
labor laws in larger companies and in the public sector. In the
informal economy, such as in the family workshops-dominated handicrafts
sector, employers routinely ignore labor laws and regulations, and
government inspectors lack the resources to monitor violations effectively.
The laws governing collective bargaining are inadequate.
Collective bargaining has been a longstanding tradition in some parts of
the economy, such as the industrial sector, and is becoming more prevalent
in the service sector, including banking, health, and the civil service.
The wages and conditions of employment of unionized workers generally are
set in discussions between employer and worker representatives.
However, wages for the vast majority of workers are set unilaterally by
employers.
Employers wishing to dismiss workers are required by law
to notify the provincial governor through the labor inspector's office.
In cases in which employers plan to replace dismissed workers, a government
labor inspector provides replacements and mediates the cases of workers who
protest their dismissal. Any worker who is dismissed for committing a
serious infraction of work rules is entitled by law to a court hearing.
There is no law specifically prohibiting antiunion
discrimination. Under the ostensible justification of
"separation for cause," employers commonly dismiss workers for
union activities that are regarded as threatening to employer interests.
The courts have the authority to reinstate such workers, but are unable to
enforce rulings that compel employers to pay damages and back pay.
Ministry of Labor inspectors serve as investigators and conciliators in
labor disputes, but they are few in number and do not have the resources to
investigate all cases. Unions have resorted increasingly to
litigation to resolve labor disputes.
Labor law reform is such a controversial issue that a
draft revised labor code has remained under discussion among the social
partners and in parliamentary committee for more than 20 years.
Labor law applies equally to the small Tangier export
zone. The proportion of unionized workers in the export zone is about
the same as in the rest of the economy, roughly 5 percent.
c. Prohibition of Forced or Compulsory Labor
Forced or compulsory labor is prohibited by royal
decree, and when authorities become aware of instances of forced labor,
courts enforce the decree; however, in practice the Government lacks the
resources to inspect all places of employment to ensure that forced labor
is not being used, and forced labor persists in the practice of adoptive
servitude.
The Government prohibits forced and bonded labor by
children, but does not enforce this prohibition effectively. The
practice of adoptive servitude, in which families employ young girls and
use them as domestic servants, is socially accepted, and the Government
does not regulate it. Credible reports of physical and psychological
abuse in such cases are widespread (see Sections 5, 6.d., and 6.f.).
Forced prostitution occurs, especially in cities with large numbers of
tourists (see Section 6.f.).
d. Status of Child Labor Practices and Minimum Age
for Employment
In October the Government ratified ILO Convention 182,
which prohibits the worst forms of child labor. Abuse of child labor
laws is common, particularly in the informal sector. Education is
compulsory for children between the ages of 7 and 13, although not all
children attend school. Special regulations pertain to the employment
of children between the ages of 12 and 16. In practice children often
are apprenticed before age 12, particularly in the informal handicraft
industry. The use of minors is common in the small family-run
workshops that produce rugs, ceramics, wood work, and leather goods.
Children, particularly rural girls, also are employed informally as
domestic servants and usually receive little or no wages. Safety and
health conditions, as well as wages in businesses that employ children
often are substandard. The law prohibits forced or bonded labor by
children; however, the Government does not enforce the law effectively (see
Section 6.c.). The practice of adoptive servitude often is
characterized by physical and psychological abuse (see Sections 5, 6.c.,
and 6.f.). The Ministry of Education, in cooperation with the
Ministry of Health and with the support of UNICEF, is pursuing a strategy
to ensure basic education and health services for child workers.
Ministry of Labor inspectors are responsible for
enforcing child labor regulations, which generally are well observed in the
industrialized, unionized sector of the economy. However, the
inspectors are not authorized to monitor the conditions of domestic
servants. The Government maintains that the informal handicrafts
sector is difficult to monitor.
The Government lacks the resources to enforce laws
against child labor, and there is general acceptance of the presumption
that, to properly learn traditional handicraft skills, it is necessary for
children to start working at a young age. In addition many citizens
claim that having children working to learn a craft is better than having
them live on the streets, where they sometimes turn to juvenile
delinquency, prostitution, and substance abuse.
In September authorities in Fez announced plans to open
four centers for the protection of children handicraft workers.
Cosponsored by UNICEF, the centers are to provide children's rights
education to child workers, their families, and employers. The
centers are to take in street children and provide them with handicraft
training and recreational opportunities. Health services for children
also are planned for each center. One center opened in late September
and three others were scheduled to open by the end of March 2001.
In 1997 the Government announced a new voluntary
labeling system for carpet exports to certify that no child labor was
involved in production. The system is cosponsored by German rug
importers. However, the Government does not monitor nonparticipating
handicraft producers that violate child labor laws.
e. Acceptable Conditions of Work
The threat of a general strike in April led to
negotiations among the Government, the Employers Association, and the labor
confederations over increasing the minimum wage and improving health and
social benefits. All three parties agreed to a 10 percent increase in
the minimum wage effective July 1, raising it to approximately $180 (1,800
dirhams) per month in the industrialized sector and to approximately $9 (90
dirhams) per day for agricultural workers; however, not all private sector
businesses had implemented the agreed-upon wage increase by year's end.
Neither the minimum wage for the industrialized sector nor the wage for
agricultural workers provides a decent standard of living for a worker and
family, even with government subsidies for food, diesel fuel, and public
transportation. Unions continue to appeal unsuccessfully for a
minimum wage of approximately $200 (2,000 dirhams). In many cases,
several family members combine their income to support the family.
Most workers in the industrial sector earn more than the minimum wage.
They generally are paid between 13 and 16 months' salary, including
bonuses, each year.
The minimum wage is not enforced effectively in the
informal and handicraft sectors. However, as a result of the
agreement reached in the April negotiations, the Government no longer pays
less than the minimum wage to workers at the lowest civil service grades.
To increase employment opportunities for recent graduates, the Government
allows firms to hire them for a limited period through a subsidized
internship program at less than the minimum wage.
The law provides for a 48-hour maximum workweek with no
more than 10 hours worked in any single day, premium pay for overtime, paid
public and annual holidays, and minimum conditions for health and safety,
including a prohibition on night work for women and minors. As with
other labor regulations and laws, these are not observed universally.
Occupational health and safety standards are
rudimentary, except for a prohibition on the employment of women in certain
dangerous occupations. Labor inspectors attempt to monitor working
conditions and accidents, but lack sufficient resources. While
workers in principle have the right to remove themselves from work
situations that endanger health and safety without jeopardizing their
continued employment, there were no reports of any instances in which a
worker attempted to exercise this right.
f. Trafficking in Persons
The law does not prohibit specifically trafficking in
persons; under the Penal Code, perpetrators are prosecuted either as scam
artists, corrupters of minors, or persons who force others into
prostitution.
Prostitution is prevalent and forced prostitution
occurs, particularly in cities with large numbers of tourists, as well as
near towns with large military installations. In 1998 a case was
reported in which a girl allegedly had been held against her will and
forced to work for 5 years in a brothel in Hajeb until she escaped at age
19.
According to the Party of Progress and Socialism's
French-language daily newspaper Al-Bayane, in February local police in the
city of Azrou in the Middle Atlas region, initiated a surprise operation
against prostitution there. Coming after the nomination of a new
director to lead the Interior Ministry's regional security force, the
operation resulted in a series of arrests of prostitute, arraignments of
brothel leaders, and closings of brothels that previously were tolerated.
Al-Bayane claimed that Azrou is home to numerous brothels that lure
vulnerable women in desperate situations (see Section 5.).
Forced prostitution involving Moroccans also occurs
abroad. In 1999 a Moroccan woman who had been recruited to be a
domestic servant in Saudi Arabia, escaped a prostitution ring there and
informed police, which led to the arrest of her Moroccan handlers, an
extended family group numbering about 40 persons. This same group of
Moroccans had been involved in organizing similar such activities
throughout the Persian Gulf region.
Voluntary teenage prostitution in urban centers has been
estimated in the thousands by NGO activists. The clientele consists
of both foreign tourists and citizens. More young girls than boys are
involved; however, young boys also work as prostitutes (see Section 5).
The practice of adoptive servitude, in which families
employ young girls and use them as indentured servants, is prevalent and
accepted socially, and the Government does not regulate it. Reports
of physical and psychological abuse in such cases are widespread; reports
of sexual abuse are less frequent. Some orphanages have been charged
as knowing accomplices in providing these young child maids; however, more
often, parents of rural girls "contract" their daughters as maids
to wealthier urban families and collect their salaries (see Sections 5 and
6.d.).
Several domestic NGO's, as well as a branch of Terre Des
Hommes, a Swiss-based international NGO, help victims of trafficking by
assisting and rehabilitating street children, educating delinquents and
runaways, assisting single mothers to become financially independent,
educating youths and prostitutes about the dangers of unprotected sex, and
advocating women's rights issues.
Source: The
Country Reports on Human Rights Practices, U.S. State Department,
February 2000.
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