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- TITLE: MOROCCO HUMAN RIGHTS PRACTICES, 1994
- AUTHOR: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
- DATE: FEBRUARY 1995
-
-
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- b. Freedom of Peaceful Assembly and Association
-
- Although the Constitution provides for freedom of assembly and
- association, this right is significantly limited by three
- decrees--promulgated in 1935, 1939, and 1958--that permit the
- Government to suppress peaceful demonstrations and mass
- gatherings. Organizers for most conferences and demonstrations
- require the prior authorization of the Ministry of Interior,
- ostensibly for security reasons.
-
- In February the Ministry of Interior denied without explanation
- authorization for a conference on women's issues planned by
- three major political parties. The conferees were to consider
- the impact of recent changes in the Code of Personal Status,
- which concerns marriage, divorce, and child custody. In April
- and June, the Ministry denied permission to AMDH to hold
- conferences on human rights and democracy. In May the Ministry
- refused to allow a planned rally in Rabat in support of Bosnian
- Muslims. On June 14, the authorities arrested activists from
- the Unemployed Graduate Students Association, an unregistered
- group tolerated by the Government, in connection with an
- unauthorized demonstration at a union headquarters in a small
- eastern city (see Section 1.e.). The authorities did not
- permit OMDH to hold a reception in Casablanca in honor of the
- prisoners amnestied in July. The authorities also denied
- organizers to proceed with Berber cultural conferences in
- Agadir and Nador. The police forcibly dispersed several
- demonstrations organized by blind students to call attention to
- their poverty. There were a number of injuries.
-
- The Government limits the right to establish organizations.
- Under the 1958 decree, persons wishing to establish an
- organization must obtain the approval of the Ministry of
- Interior before holding meetings. In practice, the Ministry
- uses this requirement to prevent persons suspected of
- advocating causes opposed by the Government, particularly
- Islamist and leftist groups, from establishing legal
- organizations. There are 29 active Islamist groups, but the
- Government has prohibited membership in two of them--Justice
- and Charity and Jama'a Islamia--because of their rhetoric
- deemed inimical to the monarchy. The Ministry of Interior must
- approve political parties--a power which the Government uses to
- control participation in the political process.
-
- c. Freedom of Religion
-
- Islam is the official religion. Ninety-nine percent of the
- population is Sunni Muslims, and the King bears the title
- "Commander of the Faithful." The Jewish community of
- approximately 6,000 is permitted to practice its faith, as is
- the somewhat larger foreign Christian community. For the first
- time in memory, the Ministry of Interior in 1994 permitted the
- broadcast of Yom Kippur services on national television.
-
- Although the Constitution provides for freedom of religion,
- only Islam, Christianity, and Judaism are tolerated, since the
- King has pronounced all other religions to be heresies. The
- Government has prohibited the Baha'i community of 150 to 200
- people from meeting since 1983. Islamic law and tradition call
- for strict punishment of any Muslim who converts to another
- faith. Any attempt to induce a Muslim to convert is similarly
- illegal.
-
- Foreign missionaries limit their proselytizing to non-Muslims
- or conduct their work quietly. Evangelical missionaries do not
- turn away Muslims who appear at services and Bible meetings.
- In January the Government quietly released from prison Mustapha
- Zmamda, a Muslimsentenced to 3 years in prison in 1993 for
- corresponding with Christian missionaries.
-
- The Ministry of Islamic Affairs monitors Friday mosque sermons
- and the Koranic schools to ensure the teaching of approved
- doctrine. The authorities sometimes suppress the activities of
- Islamic fundamentalists, but generally tolerate activities
- restricted to the propagation of Islam, education, and
- charity. Security forces commonly close mosques to the public
- shortly after Friday services to prevent use of the premises
- for unauthorized political activity.
-
- d. Freedom of Movement Within the Country, Foreign
- Travel, Emigration, and Repatriation
-
- Although the Constitution provides for freedom of movement, in
- practice security forces set up roadblocks throughout the
- country and stop traffic at will. In some regions, roadblocks
- have been maintained in the same places for years. Some
- observers characterize these as internal frontiers. Police
- regularly extract gratuities at the roadblocks, particularly
- from truck drivers. In a move to improve their image, the
- police arrested more than 1,000 travelers in 1994 for attempted
- bribery at the roadblocks. In the aftermath of the August
- violence and discovery of arms catches (see Section 1.d.), the
- authorities established additional temporary roadblocks, closed
- the border with Algeria, and subjected Algerian nationals to
- repeated interrogations.
-
- In the Morocco-administered portion of the Western Sahara, the
- Government restricts movement in areas regarded as militarily
- sensitive.
-
- The Ministry of Interior restricts freedom to travel abroad in
- certain circumstances. It has refused to issue passports to
- certain citizens, including political activists, former
- political prisoners, and Baha'is. However, the Government has
- dramatically eased these restrictions in recent years. OMDH
- currently lists only 22 citizens declared ineligible to obtain
- passports. Some former political prisoners, after being issued
- passports, were denied exit at border points on the ostensible
- basis that government computers had not been changed to reflect
- their eligibility to leave.
-
- Women must have permission from either their fathers or
- husbands to obtain a passport. A divorced woman must have her
- father's permission to obtain a passport and, if she has
- custody of the children, she must have permission of the
- children's father to obtain passports for them. Although the
- King has said that the male consent requirement is contrary to
- Islam and the Constitution, the Government took no action to
- ease the travel requirements for women.
-
- There are frequent allegations of corruption in the passport
- offices; applicants are reportedly forced to pay gratuities to
- obtain application forms and to make sure the forms are not
- lost. All civil servants must obtain written permission from
- their ministries each time they seek to travel abroad.
-
- Moroccans may not renounce their citizenship, but the King
- retains the power--rarely used--to revoke it. Tens of
- thousands of Moroccans hold more than one citizenship and
- travel with passports issued by other countries. However,
- while residing in Morocco, the authorities consider them
- Moroccan citizens. The Government has sometimes refused to
- recognize the right of embassy officials to act on behalf of
- "dual nationals" or even to receive information concerning
- their arrest and imprisonment. Dual nationals also complain of
- harassment from immigration inspectors.
-
- The law encourages voluntary repatriation of Moroccan Jews who
- have emigrated. Jewish emigres with Israeli citizenship freely
- visit Morocco. The Government also encourages the return of
- Saharans who departed Morocco due to the conflict in the
- Western Sahara--provided they recognize the Government's claim
- to the region. The Government does not permit Saharan
- nationalists who have been released from prison to live in the
- disputed territory.
-
- Section 3 Respect for Political Rights: The Right of Citizens
- to Change their Government
-
- Practically speaking, the citizens do not enjoy the right to
- change their government by democratic means. The King, as Head
- of State, appoints the Prime Minister, who is the titular head
- of government. The Parliament has the theoretical authority to
- effect change in the system of government, but has never
- exercised it. The Constitution may not be amended without the
- King's approval. The Ministry of Interior appoints provincial
- governors and local caids. The latter undergo a 2-year
- training course in the Ministry's "Ecole de Formation de
- Cadres." Municipal councils are elected bodies.
-
- Constitutional changes in 1992 authorized the Prime Minister to
- nominate other government ministers, but the King retains the
- right to replace any minister at will. Any significant
- surrender of power from the Crown to the Prime Minister's
- office was further obviated when the King decreed to the
- secretaries general, who serve at the King's pleasure, many of
- the powers previously vested in the ministers.
-
- Allegations of fraud and manipulation in the 1993 parliamentary
- election are pending before the Constitutional Council, the
- designated body adjudicating the disputes. Challenges have
- been filed for more than 100 of the 333 seats in Parliament.
- Although 17 reelections have been ordered and carried out,
- often with new credible allegations of irregularity, human
- rights groups do not expect the Council to adjudicate the
- remaining cases.
-
- Sixteen parties have members in Parliament. In a rare display
- of political independence, a coalition of major parties refused
- in 1994 to accept the King's invitation to accept ministerial
- posts--absent significant political and electoral reform,
- including control of the Ministry of Interior. As a
- consequence, most present ministers are technocrats named by
- the King as caretakers pending the formation of a longer-term
- government. In 1994 the Parliament authorized the televised
- broadcasts of ministerial question periods in Parliament.
-
- Section 4 Governmental Attitude Regarding International and
- Nongovernmental Investigation of Alleged Violations
- of Human Rights
-
- There are three officially recognized nongovernmental human
- rights groups: the Moroccan Human Rights Organization (OMDH),
- the Moroccan League for the Defense of Human Rights (LMDH), and
- the Moroccan Human Rights Association (AMDH). LMDH is
- associated with the Istiqlal Party, and AMDH is associated with
- the Party of the Socialist Avant Garde. They have formed a
- coordinating committee and generally issue joint communiques.
- OMDH is nonpartisan. LMDH and OMDH participate in some
- activities of the Royal Consultative Council on Human Rights.
-
- In January OMDH issued a communique stating that the Ministry
- of Justice had formed a partnership with OMDH, AMDH, and LMDH
- to investigate alleged violations of human rights. However, at
- year's end, there had been no significant follow-up on this
- initiative. While the Ministry of Justice held occasional
- meetings with the NGO's, the Ministry of Interior continued to
- refuse to acknowledge their inquiries directly.
-
- In comments before Parliament in February, reiterated in
- November, the Minister of Interior made clear that he resented
- inquiries from human rights groups and that neither of the two
- ministries would respond to them, even if such inquires came
- from Parliament or other ministries.
-
- The Royal Consultative Council on Human Rights (CCDH), an
- advisory body to the King, exists in sometimes uneasy
- coordination with the Deputy Ministry of Human Rights (DMHR),
- which was established by Parliament. While their common
- missions often provoked an adversarial relationship, a clearer
- division of labor emerged in 1994. CCDH has concentrated on
- the reports written by its various working groups, most notably
- its recommendations for prison reform. DMHR's activities have
- been more executive: identifying Tazmamart Prison victims for
- compensation and studying the dossiers of disappeared persons
- for possible compensation to their families. The two bodies
- worked together on the royal amnesty program: CCDH formulated
- the criteria for eligibility, and DMHR compiled a list of
- potentially eligible prisoners.
-
- Amnesty International (AI) established an office in Casablanca
- after its representatives visited Morocco in 1994. While
- citing a continuation of human rights abuses, AI commended the
- Government's openness in affording access to prisons and
- prisoners.
-
- Section 5 Discrimination Based on Race, Sex, Religion,
- Disability, Language, or Social Status
-
- Women
-
- Women suffer various forms of legal and cultural
- discrimination. Under the Criminal Code, women are generally
- accorded the same treatment as men, but are not accorded equal
- treatment under family and estate law, which is based on the
- Malikite school of Islamic law. Under this law, husbands may
- more easily divorce their wives than vice versa. Women inherit
- only half as much as male heirs. Moreover, even where the law
- guarantees equal status, cultural norms often prevent a woman's
- exercise of those rights. When a woman inherits property, for
- example, male relatives may pressure her to relinquish her
- interest.
-
- The civil law status of women is governed by the Moudouwana, or
- Code of Personal Status, which is based in part on the Koran.
- With the active support of the King, limited reforms of the
- Moudouwana, consistent with the Koran, were effected in 1993.
- The amendments allow a wife to divorce a husband who announces
- an intent to take a second wife; grant a wife unspecified
- allowance rights, based on the husband's income, in cases where
- a husband files for divorce without legal justification; and
- recognize a wife's priority of right to custody of young
- children after a divorce.
-
- Women's groups unsuccessfully requested that the Moudouwana
- changes include expanded rights to combat spousal violence, a
- problem human rights groups confirm is commonplace. Although a
- battered wife has the right to complain to the police, as a
- practical matter she would do so only if prepared to file for
- divorce. Spousal abuse is grounds for divorce, but even if
- abuse is proven, divorced women do not have the right to
- financial support from their former spouses. Hence few victims
- report abuse to authorities.
-
- The law and social practice concerning violence against women
- reflects the importance society places on the honor of the
- family. The Criminal Code includes severe punishment for men
- convicted of rape or violating a woman or girl. The defendants
- in such cases bear the burden of proving their innocence.
- However, sexual assaults often go unreported because of the
- stigma attached to the loss of virginity. A rapist may be
- offered the opportunity to marry his victim in order to
- preserve the honor of the victim's family. The law excuses the
- murder or injury of a wife caught in the act of committing
- adultery; however, a woman would not be excused for killing her
- husband under the same circumstances.
-
- While many well-educated women pursue careers in law, medicine,
- education, and government service, few make it to the top
- echelons of their professions. Women comprise approximately 24
- percent of the work force, with the majority of them in the
- industrial, service, and teaching sectors.
-
- Women suffer most from inequality in the rural areas. Rural
- women perform most hard physical labor; the rate of literacy,
- particularly in the countryside, is noticeably lower for women
- than for men. Girls are much less likely to be sent to school
- than are boys. Women who earn secondary school diplomas,
- however, have equal access to university training.
-
- Children
-
- The Government has taken little action to end child labor (see
- Section 6.d.). Young girls in particular are exploited as
- domestic servants. Orphanages are often party to the practice
- of adoptive servitude, in which families adopt young girls who
- perform the duties of domestic servants in their new families.
- Credible reports of physical abuse are widespread. The
- practice is often justified as a better alternative to keeping
- the girls in orphanages. It is ingrained in society, attracts
- little criticism, even from human rights groups, and is
- unregulated by the Government. In 1994 the Government
- continued a campaign to vaccinate children against preventable
- diseases.
-
- National/Racial/Ethnic Minorities
-
- The Constitution affirms, and the Government respects, the
- legal equality of all citizens.
-
- The official language is Arabic. The languages of instruction
- and the news media are both Arabic and French. Science and
- technical curriculums are taught in French, thereby eliminating
- the large monolingual Arabic-speaking population from these
- programs. Educational reforms in the past decade have stressed
- use of Arabic in secondary schools. Failure to similarly
- transform the university system has functionally disqualified
- many students, especially those from poorer homes where French
- tutoring is not practicable, from higher education in lucrative
- fields.
-
- Some 60 percent of the population claim Berber heritage.
- Berber cultural groups contend that the three remaining Berber
- languages and Berber traditions are rapidly being lost. Their
- repeated requests to the palace to permit the teaching of
- Berber languages in the schools have finally produced a royal
- decree to effect the necessary curriculum changes. The King
- ordered the limited broadcast of Berber-language news programs
- on radio and televison; the broadcasts commenced in 1994.
- However, the Government convicted Berber activists and canceled
- two conferences on Berber culture (see Section 1.c. and 1.f.).
- The moves suggest that the Government regards the Berber
- revival as a threat to state security.
-
- People with Disabilities
-
- Morocco has a high incidence of disabling disease. Polio is
- especially prevalent. While the Government contends that it
- seeks to integrate the disabled into society, most special
- education activities are provided by private charities and are
- generally affordable only to families with private means.
- Disabled persons typically survive by begging. In 1994 the
- Government continued a pilot training program for the blind,
- sponsored in part by a member of the royal family. There are
- no laws mandating physical changes to buildings to facilitate
- access for the disabled.
-
- Section 6 Worker Rights
-
- a. The Right of Association
-
- Although workers are free to establish and join trade unions,
- the unions themselves are not completely free from government
- interference. Perhaps a half million of Morocco's 9 million
- workers are unionized in 17 trade union federations. Three
- federations dominate the scene: the Union Marocain de Travail
- (UMT), the Confederation Democratique de Travail (CDT), and the
- Union Generale des Travailleurs Marocains (UGTM). The UMT has
- no political affiliation, but the CDT is linked to the
- Socialist Union of Popular Forces, and the UGTM to the Istiqlal
- Party. Unions belong to regional labor organizations and
- maintain ties with international trade secretariats.
-
- In practice, the internal intelligence services of the Ministry
- of Interior are believed to have informants within the unions
- who monitor their activities and the election of officers.
- Sometimes union officers are subject to government pressure.
- Union leadership does not always uphold the rights of members
- to select their own leaders. There has been no case of the
- rank and file voting out its current leadership and replacing
- it with another.
-
- Workers have the right to strike and do so. In February the
- CDT called a 1-day general strike to protest government social
- policies. However, it quickly postponed the strike
- indefinitely after the Prime Minister moved to ban it on
- grounds that there is no legislation implementing the
- constitutional provision for the right to strike. The
- Government maintained that since legal strikes are not defined
- by law, the CDT's general strike was outside the scope of
- legitimate union activity and hence illegal. Critics countered
- that the ban was an infringement of the Constitution.
-
- During the May 1 Labor Day celebrations, 12 union members
- around the country were arrested for shouting political
- slogans. Three were convicted and imprisoned. They were
- released from prison in the general amnesty in July.
-
- b. The Right to Organize and Bargain Collectively
-
- The right to organize and bargain collectively is implied in
- the constitutional provisions on the right to strike and the
- right to join organizations. The many trade union federations
- compete to organize workers. Any group of eight workers may
- organize a union and a worker may change union affiliation
- easily. A work site may contain several independent locals or
- locals affiliated with more than one labor federation.
-
- In general, the Government ensures the observance of labor laws
- in larger companies and in the public sector. In the informal
- economy, and in the textile and handicrafts industries, labor
- laws and regulations are routinely ignored by the Government
- and management. As a practical matter, unions have no judicial
- recourse to oblige the Government to enforce labor laws and
- regulations.
-
- The laws governing collective bargaining are inadequate.
- Collective bargaining has been a long-established tradition in
- some parts of the economy, but the practice is not spreading.
- Wages and conditions of employment are generally set in
- discussions between employer and worker representatives.
- Employers unilaterally set wages for the majority of workers.
-
- Employers wishing to dismiss workers are required by law to
- notify the provincial governor through the labor inspector's
- office. In cases where employers plan to replace dismissed
- workers, a government labor inspector provides replacements and
- mediates the cases of workers who protest their dismissal. Any
- worker dimissed for committing a serious infraction of work
- rules is entitled by law to a court hearing.
-
- There is no law specifically prohibiting antiunion
- discrimination. Employers commonly dismiss workers for union
- activities regarded as threatening to employer interests. The
- courts sometimes order the reinstatement of such wokers, but
- are unable to ensure that employers pay damages and back pay.
-
- Ministry of Labor inspectors serve as investigators and
- conciliators in labor disputes, but they are few in number and
- do not have the resources to investigate all cases. Unions
- have increasingly resorted to litigation to resolve labor
- disputes. In 1994 the International Labor Organization (ILO)
- again cited the Government for failing to respond adequately to
- such abuses as the dismissals and arrests of trade unionists
- and the prohibition on union demonstrations.
-
- The Labor Law applies equally to the small Tangier export
- zone. The proportion of unionized workers in the export zone
- is about the same as in the rest of the economy.
-
- c. Prohibition of Forced or Compulsory Labor
-
- Forced or compulsory labor is prohibited by ILO Convention 29,
- which was adopted by royal decree.
-
- d. Minimum Age for Employment of Children
-
- Abuse of the child labor laws is common nationwide. The law
- prohibits the employment or apprenticeship of any child under
- 12 years of age. Education is compulsory for children between
- the ages of 7 and 13. Special regulations govern the
- employment of children between the ages of 12 and 16. In
- practice, children are often apprenticed before age 12,
- particularly in the handicraft industry. The use of minors is
- common in the rug-making industry and also exists to some
- extent in the textile and leather goods industries. Children
- are also employed informally as domestics and usually receive
- little or no wages. Safety and health conditions as well as
- salaries in enterprises employing children are often
- substandard.
-
- Ministry of Labor inspectors are responsible for enforcing
- child labor regulations which are generally well observed in
- the industrialized, unionized sector of the economy. However,
- the inspectors are not authorized to monitor the conditions of
- domestic servants.
-
- e. Acceptable Conditions of Work
-
- The minimum wage does not provide a decent standard of living
- for a worker and his family--even with government subsidies for
- food, diesel fuel, and public transportation subsidies. In
- many cases, several family members combine their income to
- support the family. The minimum wage was raised by 10 percent
- on July 1 to about $167 (1,510 dirhams) a month, the first
- increase in 2 years. Labor unions call for a minimum monthly
- wage of about $220 to $230.
-
- The minimum wage is not enforced effectively in the informal
- and handicraft sectors of the economy, and even the Government
- pays less than the minimum wage to workers at the lowest civil
- service grades. To increase employment opportunities for
- recent graduates, the Government allows firms to hire them for
- a limited period for less than the minimum wage. Most workers
- in the industrial sector earn more than the minimum wage. They
- are generally paid between 13 and 16 months' salary, including
- bonuses, each year.
-
- The law provides a 48-hour maximum workweek with not more than
- 10 hours any single day, premium pay for overtime, paid public
- and annual holidays, and minimum conditions for health and
- safety, including the prohibition of night work for women and
- minors. As with other regulations and laws, these are not
- universally observed in the informal sector.
-
- Occupational health and safety standards are rudimentary,
- except for a prohibition on the employment of women in certain
- dangerous occupations. Labor inspectors endeavor to monitor
- working conditions and accidents, but lack sufficient
- resources. In 1994 five teenaged workers were paralyzed by
- glue fumes in a poorly ventilated shoe workshop.
-
-