Two Moroccan women who walked
through a market wearing dresses are facing charges of “gross indecency”, a
rights group and media reported Thursday, sparking an outcry in the kingdom.
The women were arrested on June 16 as they strolled through the open-air market
in Inezgane, a suburb of the southern city of Agadir, on their way to work,
said Fouzia Assouli, head of women’s rights organisation LDDF.
The women — hairdressers aged 23 and 29 — were surrounded by
merchants who accused them of wearing flimsy and “immoral” clothes, the Media
24 news website reported.
Security forces intervened, wresting
the women away from the angry crowd and placing them inside a police car before
driving them to a police station where they were charged with gross indecency,
it added.
Assouli told newsmen that a trial
date has been set for July 6. Rights organisations have denounced the upcoming
trial and protests are to be held later this week in Agadir and in Morocco’s
commercial capital Casablanca in support of the two women. “They were dressed
in a very respectable fashion,” said Bouchra Chetouani, a member of the
Moroccan Association for Human Rights (AMDH).
In the police report, the women were
said to have been wearing clothes that were “too tight”. Article 483 of
Morocco’s penal code states that anyone found guilty of committing an act of
“public obscenity” such as “gross indecency” can be jailed for between a month
and two years.
Supporters of the two women have
launched a petition online dubbed “Wearing a dress is not a crime”. It had been
signed by more than 8,000 supporters as of Thursday afternoon. “This is an
unprecedented case for our region,” said Aziz Sellami, the AMDH representative
in Agadir, one of Morocco’s top tourist destination which is famous for its
white sandy beaches.
Assouli said the arrests of the
women comes amid growing calls for “morality” to be respected in conservative
Morocco, which has been frequently criticised by international groups for
rights abuses. Earlier this month, pop star Jennifer Lopez sparked anger among
conservatives in Morocco — and triggered much debate — for being, according to
media, “scantily” dressed during a concert in Rabat that was broadcast on
public television.
Reference: Vanguard

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