The National - News

SO MANY LOOPHOLES: CAMPAIGNER­S SAY MOROCCO’S ANTI-ABUSE LAW FALLS SHORT

Offences against women clarified and redefined but critics say crucial support elements are being neglected

- RUQAYA IZZIDIEN

Morocco’s enactment of a law to criminalis­e abuse against women has been labelled a box-ticking exercise by critics who say that it will not be effective in addressing sexual harassment and gender-based violence.

The bill, which was approved by the Moroccan parliament in February and came into force last week, criminalis­es sexual harassment, forced marriage and some forms of domestic violence. It also levies heavier penalties for crimes committed within the family, but does not criminalis­e marital rape.

A person found guilty of sexual harassment through the unsolicite­d use of words, acts or signals of a sexual nature – whether in person, via telephone or online – may be sentenced to between one and six months in prison, and fined between $200 (Dh734.5) and $1,000.

The law – which is known locally as the Hakkaoui law after Bassima Hakkaoui, Minister for Family Affairs and Women’s Issues – defines violence against women as “any act based on gender discrimina­tion that entails physical, psychologi­cal, sexual, or economic harm to a woman”.

It obliges authoritie­s to raise awareness about gender-based violence and instructs the establishm­ent of national committees to serve the needs of women and children.

In 2009, a government survey found that 62.8 per cent of women had experience­d physical, psychologi­cal, sexual or economic violence. Of the 55 per cent who reported conjugal violence to the survey, 3 per cent reported it to the authoritie­s.

Under the rule of King Mohammed VI, several laws have been passed that have been hailed as progressiv­e, including the Moroccan Family Code – or Mudawana – of 2004 which regulates issues concerning marriage, divorce, inheritanc­e, polygamy and custody.

But campaigner­s criticised the Hakkaoui law for failing to detail the monitoring mechanisms needed to ensure that authoritie­s are held accountabl­e for their new duties.

Rothna Begum, Middle East and North Africa women’s rights researcher at Human Rights Watch, said: “Morocco’s law on violence against women finally recognises some forms of abuse that many women face from their husbands and families.” She said that authoritie­s should “address gaps to ensure that all survivors are protected from abuse, and police and prosecutor­s do their jobs”.

The bill is more of a boxcheckin­g exercise than an effective law, said Stephanie Willman Bordat, a human rights advocate at the Moroccobas­ed Mobilising for Rights Associates.

To effectivel­y criminalis­e violence against women, the law needs to be more comprehens­ive, she said. “It’s got so many loopholes, so many vague provisions, so many weaknesses that it’s just not going to provide anything resembling an effective response to violence against women.”

The bill increases the penalty for crimes committed within the family, such as assault and battery and domestic violence, but has been criticised for failing to establish protective measures or to provide guidelines to police and prosecutor­s on how to carry out investigat­ions.

According to Human Rights Watch: “Most women drop the few criminal cases that are filed as a result of pressure from their or their abuser’s families or because they are financiall­y dependent on their abusers.”

The new law does not provide legal, medical or housing assistance to victims of violence.

Ms Bordat is concerned that the lack of concrete guidelines for reporting, proving and prosecutin­g violence leaves the new legislatio­n open to interpreta­tion or mishandlin­g.

“Sexual harassment is a crime, but the law doesn’t say anything about what is evidence of the crime,” she said. “How are you supposed to prove that you were sexually harassed?”

Advocacy groups also point to the fact that the criminal code still criminalis­es sexual relations outside marriage, meaning that rape victims who are unable to prove their assault run the risk of being charged as a criminal for extramarit­al sex.

Women’s rights organisati­ons have been calling for a law criminalis­ing gender-based violence for 12 years, so Ms Bordat thinks it unlikely that parliament will soon amend the law to sufficient­ly protect women.

“If women aren’t ever going to be able to report the crime and if police are never going to be able to investigat­e it, and if prosecutor­s are never going to be able to prosecute it then you’re never going to get to the point of sentencing people to jail,” Ms Bordat said.

Women who report rape are still vulnerable to a law that penalises sexual relations outside marriage

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates