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Teenage kiss arrests spark furore in Morocco
by Aida Alami
Al Jazeera
 
Oct 2013
 
Prosecution of amorous adolescents prompts protests against kingdom''s vague public decency laws.
 
Tangier, Morocco - The arrest and pending trial of two kissing teenagers has thrust a debate about personal freedoms into the public spotlight in Morocco.
 
In early October, a 15-year-old boy and a 14-year-old girl were detained in the northeastern city of Nador and jailed. Their 16-year-old friend, who took the picture of them kissing on the street and posted it on Facebook, was also arrested. Afterwards, a local organisation alerted a prosecutor, who then charged the trio with indecency. They were released on bail October 7, and are currently awaiting trial.
 
The case ignited outrage on social media websites, and human rights groups such as Amnesty International condemned the arrests and asked for the charges to be immediately dropped.
 
"It is simply absurd that these teenagers could face a prison term just for kissing and posting a photo on Facebook," Philip Luther, Middle East and North Africa director at Amnesty International, said in a statement.
 
"These young people should never have been detained in the first place - there is no imaginable reason why expression of this type ought to result in prosecution. Launching a judicial investigation into a complaint about an act as benign as teenagers kissing is ridiculous - it should be dismissed out of hand."
 
People posted dozens of pictures kissing in support of the teenagers, captioning them: "Now you can arrest me." The hashtag #FreeBoussa ("free kiss" in Arabic) trended on Twitter. A group of about 30 people even organised a "kiss-in" in front of the parliament on October 12 in the capital, Rabat, exchanging a short kiss and chanting, "Long live love!"
 
The gathering was disrupted by protesters who yelled, "Go do that in America, or Europe. Here, we will not let it happen!" Still, the "pro-kiss" activists vowed to fight on.
 
Twenty-eight-year-old Nizar Bennamate, who was at the kiss-in, said he "believe[s] that laws should help manage conflicts among society. It also should protect Moroccans. But this law used to go after the kids in Nador is very vague."
 
He was referring to Article 484 of the Moroccan Penal Code, which sets a jail term of two to five years for any indecent act with a minor; and Article 483, which mandates a prison sentence of one month to two years for any act of public obscenity.
 
"This arrest could only be justified if the minors were a real danger to society," said Soukaina Benchekroun, a trainee lawyer in Casablanca. "A simple kiss, even repeated, cannot justify the placement of a juvenile in a correctional facility."
 
The arrest and resulting furore also underscores the fact that Morocco, a country often regarded as one of the most liberal in the Muslim world, is still deeply conservative at its core.
 
"The modernist ideas maintained by the ruling elite are not necessarily in accordance with the people," said Abdellah Tourabi, a historian and editor of the monthly magazine Zamane.
 
Tourabi said in Moroccan society, kissing is best done behind closed doors.
 
"In Morocco, the separation between private and public space is very strong - a private choice is tolerated as long as it''s not thrown in the public space," said Tourabi. "This argument is often used for the issue of eating in public during the month of Ramadan. This is how ''the kiss of Nador'' should be read to understand the different reactions."
 
In 2010, some Moroccans illegally attempted to organise a picnic during the fasting month of Ramadan - leading to their arrest and a fierce public debate. More recently, some Moroccans demanded amendments to a law allowing child rapists to be set free if they marry their victim.
 
In 2011, when people took to the streets calling for more democracy, they also demanded more religious freedom. In response, King Mohammed VI initially proposed constitutional reforms reflecting these demands. But the Islamic Justice and Development Party objected to the freedom of conscience clause in the draft constitution and it was changed to refer only to freedom of faith.
 
Nevertheless, Tourabi said he "thinks Morocco is advancing on these issues. There are of course cases that can be considered as signs of regression - but when you see the fierce reaction they generate, you can see that Morocco is on a good path."


 


Lack of respect for workers impedes help for needy people in crisis regions
by Society for Threatened Peoples
Germany
 
October 2013
 
On occasion of the publication of the latest figures, the Society for Threatened Peoples warns that a lack of respect for aid workers seriously impedes missions to help the needy people in many parts of the world: In 2012, a total of 274 helpers became crime victims – 67 of them got killed. On Monday, the project "Humanitarian Outcomes" had published the fourth report focusing on the safety of aid workers. The most dangerous countries mentioned are Somalia, Afghanistan, South Sudan, Sudan and Pakistan. "Many international aid organizations and volunteers are worried about the continuously high number of murders and kidnappings," said the STP"s Africa-consultant, Ulrich Delius, in Göttingen on Tuesday. It was only on Wednesday of last week that the Head of the Sudanese charity organization Elsaqya was shot dead in Darfur (western Sudan).
 
"Even 64 years after the signing of the Fourth Geneva Convention, which – among other things – is supposed to ensure the protection of aid workers, there are several serious threats every week, because the conflict parties refuse to recognize their status of neutrality," said Delius. "They often become victims of criminal gangs who are trying to earn ransom money from kidnappings." To make matters worse, the authorities often interfere with the work of the aid agencies, in order stop supplies for the needy in crisis regions.
 
For example, the "Humanitarian Aid Commission" (HAC) in Sudan has tried to stop aid workers from helping the refugee camps of Darfur and has also arbitrarily restricted or expelled aid agencies. In the conflict region of South Kordofan, the Sudanese authorities denied aid workers to access the tens of thousands of needy civilians for more than two years.
 
In Somalia, there had been so many attacks on aid workers that the organization "Doctors without Borders" decided to leave the country in August 2013. In Pakistan, Taliban fighters killed helpers who tried to carry out a vaccination initiative – and seven aid workers were shot dead in the north of the country on January 1, 2013. Helpers who have been working in Pakistan for a while are warning that the situation for aid workers has never been as dangerous as it is today.
 
During the past ten years, the number of kidnappings of aid workers has quadrupled. In 2012, a total of 92 workers were kidnapped. The most recent disappearances occurred in Syria in mid-October of 2013. A team of six employees of the International Committee of the Red Cross and a Syrian aid worker were kidnapped.


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