Photo Credit: Khalid Gueddar

Moroccan Cartoonist’s Trial Delayed

The trial of Khalid Gueddar, the first political cartoonist to ever depict the king, had his trial delayed  from Wednesday to September 5th. Gueddar was arrested two weeks ago and was told the following day that his charges were for ...

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POMED Report: Analyzing the FY13 State and Foreign Operations Appropriations Bills

The Project on Middle East Democracy (POMED) released a report contrasting the House and Senate Appropriations bills for fiscal year 2013, examining the potential impact of these bills on foreign aid and democracy assistance. Among the notable findings are additional ...

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Human Rights Violations in Morocco Condemned

In a report presented  in Rabat on Tuesday, Amnesty International called on the Moroccan government to address instances of police brutality, torture, and the repression of free expression. The report detailed excessive force used against peaceful demonstrators of the February ...

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U.N. Blames Morocco for the Use of Violence against Sahrouis

In El Aaiun, the northern city of Western Sahara, Moroccan police officers were accused (Fr) to torture a Sahroui, Bazeid Abdallah Lehmad. According to the Sahara Press Service, Lehmad was part of a wedding when Morrocan policemen took him away and later was ...

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Liberated Moroccan Rapper Promises Future Protest Songs

Moroccan rapper Mouad Belrhouat, whose goes by the moniker El-Haqed or "The Sullen One," has been released from a Casablanca prison after serving four months for assault, a charge which his lawyers say was a ploy to stifle the singer. ...

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Deal Reached on FY2012 Omnibus Appropriations Bill

The recently-passed omnibus package for Fiscal Year 2012 includes the State and Foreign Operations Appropriations bill. For Morocco, foreign military financing will not be appropriated until a report is submitted about steps being taken to ensure various freedoms in ...

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Summary and Highlights of the FY12 State and Foreign Operations Appropriations Bills

On Wednesday 7/27, the House State and Foreign Operations Appropriations Subcommittee held a markup session and voted to pass the 2012 State and Foreign Operations Appropirations Bill, as is, to the full committee. The bill would provide $39.6 billion ...

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Algeria: Government Prepared to Recognize Libya’s NTC

After much hesitation, Algerian Foreign Minister, Mourad Medelci, announced that Algeria was prepared to recognize Libya's National Transitional Council (NTC) once it composed a “government representative of all regions.” Algeria initially balked at acknowledging the NTC's legitimacy amid fears that it ...

Morocco: “Let Democracy Reign” in Western Sahara

At Foreign Policy’s Middle East Channel, Carne Ross of the diplomatic advisory group Independent Diplomat criticizes a recent article that calls for autonomy for Western Sahara under Moroccan sovereignty. He describes “the devastating violence unleashed by Moroccan authorities against the indigenous Saharawi people of Western Sahara in recent days,” including against Sahrawi protesters earlier this week. He argues that “the autonomy proposal is completely at odds with the peace agreement” ...

Morocco: Confrontation in Laayoune

The BBC reports that three people have been killed in a confrontation between Moroccan security forces and Saharawi protesters in the capital of Western Sahara, Laayoune. The security forces reportedly entered the camp, named Gadaym Izik and housing 12,000 protesters, early in the morning "using helicopters and water cannon to force people to leave." The violence comes as talks between the Moroccan government and the Polisario movement, which seeks ...

Freedom House: 5 GMENA Countries Among “Least Free” in the World

In a piece in Foreign Policy, Freedom House highlights the twenty nations it has identified as the "least free" in its 2010 Freedom in the World report. Six nations and territories in the Greater Middle East and North Africa (GMENA) are featured in the piece: Libya, Sudan, Saudi Arabia, Syria, and the Moroccan-controlled Western Sahara.Freedom House offers harsh criticism of the human rights and democracy records of the regimes in ...

UN Renews Peacekeeping Mission in Western Sahara

After a rather heated UN Security Council debate, a majority of the 15-member council voted to extend the UN's peacekeeping mission in Western Sahara (MINURSO) for one year under the terms of the UN-brokered 1991 ceasefire agreement between Morocco and the Western Saharan-based Polisario Front independence movement. However, the resolution did not include provisions to monitor human rights -- sought by some on the council -- prompting a Polisario spokesman to condemn the ...

POMED Notes: “Promoting Security through Diplomacy and Development: The Fiscal Year 2011 International Affairs”

In a hearing on the administration's recently released budget request, the House Committee on Foreign Affairs invited Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to give testimony on particular budgetary items relating to U.S. diplomatic and development efforts abroad. Committee Chairman Howard Berman (D-CA) opened the hearing with an affirmation of the value of investing in international diplomacy; not only to promote American values, but also as a method of prevention in ...

North Africa: Human Rights Abuses

Human Rights Watch blasts the recent convictions of Tunisian journalists Taofik Ben Brik and Zouhair Makhlouf after unfair trials. Middle East director of HRW, Sarah Leah Whitson, laments that since his sham electoral victory,  President Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali has been "on a vengeful campaign to punish the few journalists and human rights activists who dared to question his record."Meanwhile, Middle East Online observes that the hunger strike by Western Sahara activist Aminatou ...

Morocco: Haidar Returns Home

Middle East Online reports that Western Sahara activist Aminatou Haidar has returned home after starting a hunger strike over a month ago. Police stated Haidar fulfilled entry requirements by signing a form that she was "arriving in Morocco." In response to the news, Secretary Clinton said she was "pleased" to hear about Haidar's return.

Morocco: Sahara Activist Saga Continues

Amnesty International has called for Morocco to allow Western Sahara activist Aminatou Haidar, who is currently on a hunger strike after being denied access to her homeland, be allowed to return to the Sahara.  In a petition to Moroccan Prime Minister Abbas El Fassi, Amnesty called on the “authorities in Morocco to allow her immediate and unconditional return to Laayoune and give her back her passport” and unblock her bank ...

Report: Human Rights on the Decline Part II

As we reported earlier, the Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies (CIHRS) has released a comprehensive and thorough report, called "Bastion of Impunity, Mirage of Reform," on the state of human rights throughout the Arab world. The full report in Arabic spans 254 pages and chronicles in detail the backsliding on human rights in the region while also identifying a few points of optimism. In addition to the full report, CIHRS has ...

Morocco: Hunger Strike Goes On

The BBC reports that Western Sahara activist Aminatou Haidar has once again been refused entry into Morocco from Spain as her hunger strike to protest her treatment enters its fourth week.  At a time of increasing Spanish and Moroccan tensions, Middle East Online reports Haidar was not allowed to fly to her home town in Laayoune in Western Sahara from Lanzarote in Spain's Canary Islands because she refused to identify herself ...

Morocco Threatens Independence Seekers

The Daily Star reports that Moroccan King Muhammad VI has called for action against traitors who threatened the country’s “territorial integrity," a direct warning to Western Sahara independence campaigners. Morocco is currently offering the territory limited autonomy, but the Algerian backed Polisarios are holding out for a referendum offering independence. In a speech on Friday the king asked, "would any democratic country accept the use of democracy and human rights as ...

Western Sahara Talks Stalled

Western Sahara's independence movement threatens to pull out of talks with Morocco unless seven detained activists are released from jail. At a press conference, a spokesman for the the Polisario Front stated, "the detention of the seven Sahrawi activists and human rights abuses in the occupied Sahrawi territories are a threat to peace and to the negotiations with Morocco." The seven activists were arrested after disembarking from a plane in ...

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