Morocco journalists
Morocco court has rejected appeals of two imprisoned journalists charged with sexual assault as Human Rights Watch condemned the decision. Image: Wikimedia Commons

Home » Morocco court rejects appeal of two journalists in prison

Morocco court rejects appeal of two journalists in prison

Morocco’s top court has rejected the final appeals of two journalists, Omar Radi and Soulaimane Raissouni, imprisoned on sexual assault charges they deny, their lawyer said Wednesday 19 July 2023. The court of cassation in Rabat on Tuesday “rejected our appeal and confirmed the prison sentences” of the two men who have been behind bars […]

20-07-23 17:53
Morocco journalists
Morocco court has rejected appeals of two imprisoned journalists charged with sexual assault as Human Rights Watch condemned the decision. Image: Wikimedia Commons

Morocco’s top court has rejected the final appeals of two journalists, Omar Radi and Soulaimane Raissouni, imprisoned on sexual assault charges they deny, their lawyer said Wednesday 19 July 2023.

The court of cassation in Rabat on Tuesday “rejected our appeal and confirmed the prison sentences” of the two men who have been behind bars since 2021, lawyer Miloud Kandil told AFP.

ALSO READ: Jailed journalists in Morocco to be released: Lawyers urge

Radi, 37, was handed a six-year prison term and Raissouni, 51, a five-year sentence in trials that defence lawyers labelled “flawed”. Human Rights Watch has accused Morocco of using criminal trials, especially for alleged sexual offences, as “techniques of repression” to silence journalists and government critics.

Authorities in the North African kingdom say the journalists were tried for common law crimes which “have nothing to do” with their profession or free speech. Radi’s father told AFP that the family had “expected this decision despite the countless irregularities” that had marred the judicial procedure.

ALSO READ: South Africa had no ‘capacity’ to arrest Putin, says Mapaila

DAMAGING MOROCCO IMAGE?

“We know that justice is not independent in this case, but we hope for a royal pardon to close this file, which has damaged the image of our country so much,” added Driss Radi.

Lawyers for jailed Moroccan journalists and rights defenders had earlier urged the authorities to find a “judicial, political and legal solution” so that the two journalists could be freed.

ALSO READ: Kenya’s minister in trouble over insults against journalists

They had warned that their prison conditions “do not respect basic rights” and threaten their health. The watchdog group Reporters Without Borders (RSF) ranks Morocco 144th out of 180 countries in its latest World Press Freedom Index, down nine positions from 2022. Khaled Drareni, RSF’s North Africa representative, said of the latest court ruling that “the signal sent is a disastrous one”.

Feminist lawyer Aicha Guella, president of victims’ rights group AMVD, welcomed the ruling and charged that Radi and Raissouni and their supporters were “trying to politicise these cases when the facts have been established in court”.

ALSO READ: Poland defends detention of SA journalists and Presidential security

“Morocco lost an opportunity to reverse course on its retaliatory measures against independent journalists, whose voices the country so desperately needs,” said Sherif Mansour, Middle East and North Africa coordinator of the Committee to Protect Journalists.

Radi, an investigative journalist who has written about official corruption, was arrested and charged in July 2020. He was prosecuted for “undermining the internal security of the state” and accepting foreign financing and, in a separate case, for the “rape” of a former colleague who rejected his claim that they had consensual relations.

ALSO READ: Zimbabwe’s opposition faces obstacles ahead of elections

WHEN WAS RAISSOUNI ARRESTED?

Raissouni, an editorialist who has been critical of the authorities, was prosecuted on “sexual assault” charges brought by a young LGBTQ activist, which he has denied. He was arrested in May 2020 but did not attend most of his initial trial between February and July 2021 because he was on a 122-day hunger strike.

The court also upheld the conviction and one-year jail term of another journalist, Imad Stitou, who had been a defence witness in Radi’s trial but was then charged with “failure to assist a person in danger”. Stitou, who had backed Radi’s testimony in court, left Morocco and was tried in absentia.

isb-agr/fka/mca/cwl

© Agence France-Presse