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44 Islamists held in Morocco
10/03/2008 14:57 - (SA)
Rabat - Moroccan security forces arrested 44 members of the country's largest Islamic opposition group over the weekend after it tried to hold marches in solidarity with the Palestinians, the government said.
Nineteen members of Al Adl wal-Ihsane (Justice and Charity), which was tolerated by the government, but had no legal status to organise public meetings, were rounded up on Sunday in the northeastern town of Nador.
"Some 200 people were getting ready to take part ... but the imposing presence of the security forces stopped them holding this unauthorised march," state news agency MAP cited a security official as saying.
The government arrested 25 group members the previous evening after they gathered without permission in a house in Driouech, 60km west of Nador, the official said.
Group spokesperson Fathallah Arsalane said the arrests came after Justice and Charity tried to hold demonstrations across the country in support of the Palestinians.
'We condemn terrorism'
Such demonstrations were held often in Morocco to express solidarity with the suffering of the Palestinian people and in support of their demands for full statehood.
The meeting in Driouech was a routine gathering for Qur'anic readings and prayers and those arrested were all released later, Arsalane said.
He added: "The Makhzen (political establishment) has been doing this kind of thing for the past year and a half. Our association condemns terrorism and opposes violence. Our ideas are published and everyone in Morocco knows them."
Justice and Charity accused the government of trying to stifle it by limiting its sources of funding, fining members and putting hundreds of them on trial.
The group said it aimed to transform Moroccan society through social work and non-violent political action that championed women's rights, active citizenship and redistribution of wealth.
Opponents said it had a hidden agenda to abolish the monarchy and established a hardline Islamic state with sharia law.
The group was inspired by Sufi mysticism and had developed a personality cult around charismatic leader Sheikh Abdessalam Yassine, who established the movement over 20 years ago.
It was allowed to operate as a charity, but excluded from official political activity because of its hostility to the powerful monarchy.
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