Yahoo – AFP,
May 31, 2017
Al Hoceima
(Morocco) (AFP) - Several thousand people took to the streets in Morocco after
dark on Tuesday to demand the release of the leader of months of protests in
the neglected northern Rif region.
The region
has been shaken by social unrest since the death in October of fishmonger
Mouhcine Fikri, 31, who was crushed in a rubbish truck in the fishing port of
Al-Hoceima as he protested against the seizure of swordfish caught out of
season.
Nasser
Zefzafi, who has emerged as the head of the grassroots Popular Movement, was
arrested on Monday after three days on the run.
Demonstrators
came out near the centre of Al-Hoceima for a fifth straight night at around 10
pm (2200 GMT), after the breaking of the daytime fast observed by Muslims
during the holy month of Ramadan.
The
protesters shouted slogans including "We are all Zefzafi" and
"End militarisation", with hundreds of them brandishing photographs
of the detained leader.
Anti-riot
police attempted to disperse the protest, but pulled back following a tense but
non-violent standoff with the demonstrators.
A similar
demonstration took place in the neighbouring town of Imzouren, with a strong
police presence, images on social media showed.
![]() |
Demonstrators
in Morocco's neglected northern Rif region crowd the streets of
the city of
Al-Hoceima on May 30, 2017, gathering for a fifth straight day
(AFP Photo/FADEL
SENNA)
|
Smaller
protests were held in the capital Rabat and the commercial capital Casablanca
but were broken up by police, Moroccan media reported.
Zefzafi's
arrest was ordered after he allegedly interrupted a preacher at a mosque on
Friday and called for further demonstrations.
Prosecutors
charged that he had "obstructed, in the company of a group of individuals,
freedom of worship" at the mosque in Al-Hoceima.
He was
arrested on Monday "along with other individuals" and transferred to
Casablanca, prosecutors said.
As of
Monday evening police had arrested 40 people in connection with the
disturbances in Al-Hoceima, according to officials.
Human
rights groups gave higher figures.
The mainly
ethnically Berber Rif region has long had a tense relationship with Morocco's
central authorities, and was at the heart of Arab Spring-inspired protests in
2011.
The
protests subsided following a series of political reforms including
constitutional changes that saw King Mohamed VI give up some of his
wide-ranging powers.


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