Physical Address
Indirizzo: Via Mario Greco 60, Buttigliera Alta, 10090, Torino, Italy
Physical Address
Indirizzo: Via Mario Greco 60, Buttigliera Alta, 10090, Torino, Italy
The risk of seeing Morocco plunging in chaos is a hypothesis validated by the media that carefully follow the situation in this kingdom. There is currently a void linked to the king’s state of health against the backdrop of the strong repression of dissident votes and a persistent social sling. Moroccan opponents note that Morocco is moving on, and, worse, for some observers, the country is retreating, unlike the propaganda distilled by Makhzen through its agents in the media, gradually paid to lie about the real state of the kingdom.
This observation is a real danger to the Moroccan state, because the void could be filled by spontaneous or non -framed extremist expressions. Academics believe that politics in Morocco is in distress and lives in a critical situation which arouses concern and fear. In fact, Morocco is experiencing an unprecedented decline in citizens’ confidence in political space. In order to hide this sad reality of the country, Makhzen pursues its policy of repression of dissident voices coupled with propaganda campaigns intended for both internal consumption and intoxicating public opinion abroad. However, Makhzen has much to do with human rights activists who are mobilized around the Sahrawi issue.
In this regard, the Moroccan occupying authorities expelled two human rights on Sunday from the United States and Portugal, upon arrival in the city of Laâyoune, in the occupied part of Western Sahara, indicate concordant Sahrawi sources. The two activists, members of the “International Nonviolence Organization”, based in Washington, were preparing to have an interview with the former political detainee Sahrawi Mahfouda Bamba Lefkir as well as other activists.
The two activists had reached, on Friday and Saturday, during a visit to the city of Dakhla occupied, to meet activists, human rights defenders as well as journalists, whose testimonies concerning the daily ordeal suffered by the Sahrawi people, temporarily escaping the vigilance of the Moroccan occupation authorities who had taken them for tourists. These meetings allowed them to shed more light on the issue of Sahrawi civil prisoners held in Moroccan jails, the abuse they undergo and the attacks they are the subject of. The expulsion of the two activists highlights the blackout policy adopted by Morocco to prevent the world from learning about the situation in the occupied Sahrawi territories.
THERE