Morocco/Western Sahara: Secret detention and torture on the rise



News Release Issued by the International Secretariat of Amnesty International
AI-index: MDE 29/001/2003     21/02/2003

Amnesty International today expressed its support for calls by Moroccan 
human rights organizations and activists who protested before the Moroccan 
parliament yesterday against the government's draft "anti-terrorism-law".

"We are particularly concerned about proposed provisions to widen the scope 
of applicability of the death penalty and to extend the existing legal 
limit of detention before being formally charged, where detainees are at 
increased risk of torture and ill-treatment," the organization said.

On 14 February 2002 Amnesty International wrote to the Prime Minister of 
Morocco, His Excellency Driss Jettou, expressing grave concerns at the 
proposed legislative changes as well as the increase in reports of torture, 
ill-treatment, and secret detention in recent months.
While the organization welcomes public assurances by the Moroccan 
authorities that human rights will be upheld if the new draft law is 
adopted, further guarantees must be put in place to ensure that measures 
taken in the name of security will not be at the detriment of the 
protection of human rights.

Over the past nine months, Amnesty International has received numerous 
reports of scores of detainees being tortured or ill-treated in custody in 
order to extract confessions or to force them to sign statements which they 
rejected or denied. Many of the reports related to Islamists allegedly held 
in secret detention and accused of involvement in or planning violent acts.

"Having repeatedly welcomed a reduction in the incidences of secret 
detention, torture and ill-treatment in recent years, we are now very 
concerned that this practice is once again on the rise."

Amnesty International fears that the case of ten Saudi Arabian and Moroccan 
men and women currently on trial in connection with an alleged plan to blow 
up NATO warships in the Straits of Gibraltar and of plotting attacks on 
cafés and public buses in Marrakesh is just one example among many of this 
renewed practice of secret detention and torture.

On 12 and 13 May 2002 three Saudi Arabian nationals, Zouhair Hilal Mohamed 
al-Tubaiti, Hilal Jaber Awad al-Assiri, and Abdellah M'sefer Ali al-Ghamdi 
were arrested, allegedly by members of the secret service (la Direction de 
la Surveillance de Territoire). They were reportedly held in secret 
detention for one month, during which their families were not notified 
about their arrest or whereabouts, and the detainees were not granted 
access to legal counsel, in violation of Moroccan law and international 
human rights standards..

The three Saudi Arabian nationals allege that they were tortured regularly 
during interrogations while in secret detention. The torture techniques 
used reportedly included suspension, beatings and threats that their wives 
would be raped in order to make them sign "confessions".

The three Moroccan women accused in the case, Bahija Haidur, Huriya Haidur 
and Na'ima Harun, alleged that they were beaten and threatened with rape to 
make them confess.

Amnesty International reminds the Moroccan authorities of its obligations 
under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) , 
which absolutely prohibits torture under all circumstances, and the UN 
Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment 
or Punishment.


Background

The Moroccan Criminal Procedure Code sets strict limits for garde à vue 
(detention before being formally charged). Furthermore, Article 9(3) of the 
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) stipulates: 
"Anyone arrested or detained on a criminal charge shall be brought promptly 
before a judge or other officer authorized by law to exercise judicial 
power ..."The UN Human Rights Committee has stated in this regard that 
"...delays should not exceed a few days". Amnesty International is 
concerned that the rights of at least the three Saudi Arabian nationals, as 
guaranteed under Article 9(3) of the ICCPR, were violated.

According to the organization's information, the three men were arrested on 
12 and 13 May 2002 and were not brought before a judge until 13 June. 
Amnesty International is concerned to learn, moreover, that official 
records allegedly indicate their arrest date as 12 June. The organization 
brought to the Moroccan authorities' attention during the 1990s, and 
before, numerous allegations that arrest dates had been falsified on 
official records to mask the practice of secret detention, but has in 
recent years publicly welcomed positive steps taken by the Moroccan 
government to address this problem.

Furthermore, Amnesty International is concerned that the draft 
"anti-terrorism law" will further jeopardise civil and human liberties in 
Morocco. Under Article 218(5) of the draft law, crimes previously 
punishable by life imprisonment would, when defined as "acts of terrorism" 
under Article 218(1), carry the death penalty. Under Article 66 of the 
draft law, people accused of, among other crimes, undermining the internal 
security of the state could be held in garde à vue detention for a legal 
limit of 144 hours. The current legal limit for garde à vue detention for 
those accused of such crimes is 96 hours, as stipulated in Article 68 of 
the Criminal Procedure Code.


View more on Morocco/Western Sahara 
http://click.topica.com/maaaSfVaaWd97bb0imPb/


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