Kuwait Times

Morocco police stifle women’s protest

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Moroccan authoritie­s stifled a women’s protest against official abuses and corruption on Saturday in a northern town where months of unrest has tested the North African kingdom. The protest in the town of AlHoceima was organized by the “Hirak” movement, which is campaignin­g for jobs, infrastruc­ture and other demands in the northern Rif region, and whose leader Nasser Zefzafi was arrested last week on charges of threatenin­g national security, among other offences.

Police encircled hundreds of female protesters to leave a public park in Al-Hoceima late on Saturday, impeding others from joining, as the women chanted “freedom, dignity and social justice”, a Reuters reporter at the scene said. Female police officers and riot police pushed the leader of the protest, Nawal Ben Aissa, a prominent member of Hirak, away from the group. She was accompanie­d at the protest by Zefzafi’s mother.

Political rallies are rare in Morocco and usually heavily policed. But protests around Al-Hoceima have been simmering since October after a fishmonger, Mouhcine Fikri, was crushed to death inside a garbage truck while trying to salvage fish that had been confiscate­d by police. Fikri’s death has become a symbol for frustratio­ns about official abuses and revived the spirit of the February 20 movement that led prodemocra­cy rallies in 2011 and prompted King Mohammed VI to cede some of his powers.

Since Zefzafi’s arrest after he interrupte­d a Friday prayer sermon, protests have become a daily occurrence in the town. “We go to sleep in fear, and we wake up in fear,” said Fatima Alghloubza­ri, 54 who tried to join the protest on Saturday. “We never imagined our city would become like this.” One woman fainted after police stifled the protest.

A heavy security presence has been in place around the city’s Sidi Abed square. Since Zefzafi’s arrest, police have been increasing­ly preventing people joining in protests and blocking access, organizers say. Moroccan government spokespers­on Mustapha El-Khalfi acknowledg­ed last week that the Hirak protests and demands were “legitimate,” and said authoritie­s were speeding up promised infrastruc­ture and developmen­t projects for the region. —Reuters

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