Morocco Jails Lecturer for One Year in Prison over ‘Sexual Harassment’

 Members of a women's rights association during a press conference about sexual aggression against women in universities = FADEL SENNA AFP
Members of a women's rights association during a press conference about sexual aggression against women in universities = FADEL SENNA AFP
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Morocco Jails Lecturer for One Year in Prison over ‘Sexual Harassment’

 Members of a women's rights association during a press conference about sexual aggression against women in universities = FADEL SENNA AFP
Members of a women's rights association during a press conference about sexual aggression against women in universities = FADEL SENNA AFP

A Moroccan court has jailed a lecturer for a year for sexually harassing a female student, a lawyer said Saturday, as a “sex for grades” scandal rocks the kingdom’s academic institutions.

“The defendant was found guilty of sexual harassment by the Tangiers court of first instance,” lawyer Aicha Guellaa told AFP.

He “was sentenced to a year in prison without parole and a fine of 50,000 dirhams ($5,300, 4,700 euros) in damages,” Guellaa added.

“We are not satisfied with this sentence, because these are very serious crimes which will mark the victim forever,” she stressed, noting that the woman would appeal.

The lecturer, a 46-year-old Spanish teacher at a translation school in Tangiers, was one of several charged in recent weeks as female students in higher education in the country broke their silence about sexual blackmail.

The scandals have provoked outrage on social media in the kingdom, where rights groups have warned not enough is being done to protect women from sexual violence.

On January 12, a lecturer at a university in Settat, south of the port city of Casablanca, was jailed for two years on similar charges.

Four more lecturers are still facing trial, in an affair that has provoked an online movement.

The trials are highly unusual in the North African country, where despite surveys showing a high level of sexual abuse, many women are reluctant to report incidents for fear of reprisals or reputational damage.

Despite reports of sexual harassment at universities in recent years, few victims have lodged official complaints and those that do rarely see results.

In 2018, after years of debate, a law for the first time provided for prison sentences for “harassment, aggression, sexual exploitation or mistreatment.”

Women's rights groups say the law does not go far enough.



Dozens Die of Mysterious Illness in Besieged Sudan Town

FILE PHOTO: Sudanese people, displaced from Jezira state due to RSF violence, sit under a tree in New Halfa, Kassala state, Sudan, November 3, 2024. REUTERS/El Tayeb Siddig/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Sudanese people, displaced from Jezira state due to RSF violence, sit under a tree in New Halfa, Kassala state, Sudan, November 3, 2024. REUTERS/El Tayeb Siddig/File Photo
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Dozens Die of Mysterious Illness in Besieged Sudan Town

FILE PHOTO: Sudanese people, displaced from Jezira state due to RSF violence, sit under a tree in New Halfa, Kassala state, Sudan, November 3, 2024. REUTERS/El Tayeb Siddig/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Sudanese people, displaced from Jezira state due to RSF violence, sit under a tree in New Halfa, Kassala state, Sudan, November 3, 2024. REUTERS/El Tayeb Siddig/File Photo

At least 73 people have died of mysterious causes in the Sudanese town of al-Hilaliya, besieged by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, the Sudanese Doctors Union said late on Wednesday.
It is one of dozens of villages that have come under attack in eastern El Jezira state since the defection of a top RSF commander to the army, which prompted revenge attacks that have displaced more than 135,000 people.
The war between the two forces has created the world's largest humanitarian crisis, displacing more than 11 million and plunging more into hunger while drawing in foreign powers and prompting fears of state collapse, Reuters said.
While high death tolls in other parts of Jezira came as a result of RSF shelling and gunfire, in Hilaliya people have fallen ill with diarrhea, overwhelming a local hospital according to the union and three people from the area.
A network blackout enforced by the RSF has made it difficult to determine the exact cause.
One man who spoke to Reuters said three of his family members had died of the same illness, but he only found out days later when others escaped to an area with internet access.
Those who wish to leave must pay high sums at RSF checkpoints, said another man.
According to pro-democracy activists, the siege began on Oct. 29 when the RSF raided the town, killing five and surrounding residents inside three mosques.
Hilaliya is home to the family of defected commander Abuagla Keikal, which locals say may explain the siege of a previously stable trade hub that had housed 50,000 people, including many displaced from other areas.
The town's markets and warehouses were looted, witnesses said.
Satellite imagery from a Yale Humanitarian Lab report showed rapid increase in cemeteries in several Jezira towns since the latest revenge attacks began in late October. It also showed evidence of the burning of agricultural fields in the village of Azrag.