New York, May 12, 2003Moroccan journalist Ali Lmrabet, who
began a hunger strike on Tuesday, May 6, to protest continued government
harassment, is scheduled to appear in a court in the capital, Rabat, tomorrow
to face charges including "insulting the king" and "challenging
the territorial integrity of the state."
According to Lmrabet, in April, police questioned him twice about recent
articles in his magazines, Demain and its Arabic sister paper, Douman.
The issues included an interview with Abdullah Zaazaa, a vocal opponent
of Morocco’s monarchy; a satirical photomontage of the wedding of
former interior minister Driss Basri’s daughter, which lampooned
government officials; and an article about the royal court’s finances.
(See CPJ's April
17 letter to King Muhammad VI.)
State prosecutors formally charged Lmrabet on April 21 in connection
with the articles. He was slated to appear in court on May 7, but Lmrabet
began a hunger strike on May 6 and told CPJ that he refused to appear
in court the next day.
The hearing was rescheduled for tomorrow, May 13. Lmrabet told CPJ
that he will attend. If convicted, the journalist faces up to five years
in prison.
Lmrabet also said he received a call last week from a manager at Ecoprint,
the printing house where Demain and Douman are published, and was told
that the company would no longer be able to print his magazines. Lmrabet
said the manager told him that he had been receiving "pressure"
not to print to the weeklies but did not specify the source of this pressure.
"Once again, we call on Moroccan authorities to cease harassing and
intimidating independent journalists," said CPJ executive director
Ann Cooper. "The case against Ali Lmrabet should be dropped immediately,
and he should be allowed to continue his professional work without any
official interference."

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