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Press & press
Morocco to try top Islamist for anti-monarchy views
Reuters, Thursday 9th June 2005
RABAT, June 9 (Reuters) - A top member of a banned Islamist group who predicted the fall of Morocco's monarchy and called for the setting up of a republic will go on trial this month, official media reported on Thursday.
"I'm accused of attacking the monarchic regime and face three to five years imprisonment," said Nadia Yassine, daughter of Abdeslam Yassine, the spiritual leader of the Justice and Charity group.
The group, which rejects violence, is seen as the main opponent to the North African monarchy. It has a strong following in universities and is popular in poor areas.
Nadia told a newspaper last week she expected the monarchy to collapse soon and that "Moroccans can live without King Mohammed". She also said the Moroccan constitution was "worthy of history's bin" and called for the setting up of a republic.
"I only expressed my views and, contrary to what they claim, the authorities can't tolerate freedom of speech," Nadia told Reuters by phone from her home near Rabat.
Nadia and Abdelaziz Gougass, editor of the al-Ousbouaaya al-Jadida newspaper that published the frontpage interview, will appear at a Rabat court on June 28, state news agency MAP quoted a judiciary source as saying.
Both were interrogated last week by police after the interview appeared, but MAP did not say whether they had been charged yet.
Officials at the Justice Ministry could not immediately comment.
Several lawyers said Gougass could be jailed for publishing such remarks, under the country's press law.
MAP added that police had summoned Justice and Charity group's spokesman Fathallah Arsalane on Thursday for interrogations after he backed Nadia in comments published this week. Arsalane could not be reached.
Justice and Charity is banned from politics but allowed to do charity and other work linked mainly to education.
However, it has flexed its muscles several times in the past by rallying up to hundreds of thousands of sympathisers in demonstrations mainly in solidarity with the Palestinians.
Authorities keep a tight rein on the Islamist movement fearing it may gain too much ground for their liking in Morocco's Muslim monarchy, Western diplomats say.