New York, June 12, 2003—A delegation from the Committee to Protect
Journalists (CPJ) met with Moroccan ambassador to the United States, Aziz
Mekouar, in Washington, D.C., today to express its deep concern about
the recent imprisonment of two Moroccan editors and to call for their
immediate release.
- Ali Lmrabet, owner and editor of two weeklies, the French-language
Demain and its Arabic sister publication, Douman, was
jailed on May 21 after a court in the capital, Rabat, found him guilty
of "insulting the king" and "challenging the territorial integrity
of the state." He was sentenced to four years in prison and fined
20,000 Moroccan dirhams (US$2,000). The court also ordered the two
weeklies closed.
Lmrabet's conviction stems from articles and cartoons published in
the two magazines, including an interview with Abdullah Zaazaa, an
opponent of Morocco's monarchy who called for the self-determination
of the people of Western Sahara; a satirical photomontage showing
photos from the wedding of former Interior Minister Driss Basri's
daughter superimposed on a photo from King Muhammad VI's wedding,
an article about the royal court's finances, and a cartoon that criticized
public displays of reverence to authority. Lmrabet has been on a hunger
strike since May 6 to protest the legal case against him. He is currently
in a hospital in Rabat as a result of the strike. A decision in his
appeal is scheduled for June 17.
- Mustafa Alaoui, editor of the weekly Al-Ousboua, was
detained on June 5 under Morocco's recently enacted anti-terrorism
law. Alaoui was arrested for publishing a communiqué issued
by an Islamist group that claimed responsibility for some of the multiple
suicide bombings in Casablanca on May 16.
Alaoui, who suffers from diabetes, is also reportedly in poor health
in Sale prison near Rabat.
"These jailings mark a significant deterioration in press freedoms in
Morocco," said CPJ executive director Ann Cooper. "Simply put, journalists
should never be jailed for their words or opinions." Cooper, who attended
the meeting along with CPJ board member Josh Friedman, CPJ Middle East
program coordinator Joel Campagna, and CPJ Washington representative Frank
Smyth, added that Morocco now joins Tunisia and Egypt as the other countries
in the Arab world that currently imprison journalists.
"Morocco's press is at a critical point. No matter how unsettled the government
feels by criticism, it must remain true to its stated commitments to a
free press," said CPJ board member Friedman. "The imprisonment of these
editors seriously jeopardizes Morocco's reputation as a country that tolerates
a more open press than its neighbors."
Ambassador Mekouar told the delegation that he would convey CPJ's concerns
to the Moroccan government.

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