Reda Zaireg| Associated Press MARRAKECH, Morocco: It all began when a swordfish was seized by the police. Morocco is marking one year since a fisherman’s gruesome death spawned a social protest movement against police abuse – an event that has drawn comparisons to the 2010 death of a Tunisian vendor that sparked the Arab Spring uprisings.
Since October 2016, the northern Moroccan town of Al-Hoceima in the ethnically Berber Rif region has seen unrest stemming from the death of 31-year-old Mouhcine Fikri, an impoverished local fish seller. Fikri was crushed in a garbage truck while trying to retrieve a valuable swordfish seized by police, who said its sale was illegal.
Since then, a protest movement called Hirak Rif has held demonstrations to demand social justice and economic development.
In May, Moroccan authorities cracked down on Hirak Rif’s leaders and a large number of protesters, arresting 330 to 400 people, according to the Moroccan Human Rights Association. Yet the movement’s influence is still being felt. Moroccan King Mohammed VI Tuesday fired four government officials following alleged delays in development programs for Al-Hoceima. This week also saw the start of the trial of Hirak Rif’s charismatic leader, Nasser Zefzafi, which is being closely followed by Moroccans.
The Rif region enjoys a strong regional identity and has historically always enjoyed some level of independence from the central government. In 1921, when Morocco was colonized by France and Spain, the legendary rebel leader Abdel-Krim installed a republic in the region after defeating the Spanish army.
Although the Rif Republic was dissolved just five years later in 1926, it deeply marked the collective memory.
In 1959 and 1984, uprisings broke out in the Rif that were brutally suppressed by King Hassan II, the current king’s father.
The Hirak Rif movement has its roots in the region’s marginalization, as well as in the evolution of a political consciousness and a desire for social justice, a redistribution of wealth and respect for the rule of law.
Inspired by the Hirak Rif, activists from other marginalized areas have launched their own groups.
In southern Morocco, the city of Zagora has seen multiple protests in recent weeks over access to clean water – and the Zagora Hirak was able to get the city’s drinking water service back to normal.
“The Hirak has put a spotlight on the lack of local democracy,” said Kenza Afsahi, a sociologist at the University of Bordeaux and the author of several works on the Rif.
But Afsahi said the movement’s achievements have limits.
“Despite Hirak’s popularity in national and international public opinion, the movement has failed to reverse the balance of power. The authorities continue to be relatively repressive. There is also a widespread concern about the decline of human rights,” she said.
Several local and international organizations are now looking to the monarch as the person who can free the Hirak detainees.
“In the Parliament, we have discussed the possibility of addressing a request for pardon of the Hirak detainees to the king” but it does not yet have enough support, said Abdel-Latif Ouahbi of the PAM opposition party.
Abdellah Bouanou of the ruling Justice and Development Party suggested “we must go ahead and make a reconciliation” for the arrested activists so the situation in Hoceima does not fester.
A call for “the immediate release of all Hirak prisoners and the cessation of the repression” against protesters was released Saturday by the Committee for Solidarity, which is based in Casablanca.
The text was signed by 36 European lawmakers, dozens of trade unions, academics and public figures, including American philosopher Noam Chomsky, British film director Ken Loach and Indian author Arundhati Roy.
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