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T.A.F.K.A.Z
13-12-03, 00:47
Morocco
Moroccan girls increasingly victims of abuse



afrol News, 3 March - New research shows that the number of Moroccan girls and young women at risk for sexual abuse, slavery, forced labour and trafficking has grown dramatically during the last years. As government attempts to curb traditional discrimination, new types of abuse are introduced from abroad.

Issues of poverty, rural exodus and the corresponding growth of urban areas, migration to Europe and the Arab Gulf States, a large domestic service sector employing young girls, a heavy dependence on foreign tourism and investment, rapidly evolving moral standards and challenges to traditional sexual behaviour are currently confronting Morocco as it stands at the crossroads of its political, social and economic development.

During the 31 days of March 2003, the International Human Rights Law Group in Morocco (IHRLG Rabat) and 13 local partners are to conduct a variety of events in more than 20 sites across Morocco to raise awareness of the growing number of Moroccan girls and young women at risk of sexual abuse, forced labour, human trafficking and slavery-like practices in prostitution and domestic service.

- This first-of-its-kind national advocacy initiative targets the public, government officials, civic authorities, junior high and high school students, non-governmental organisations, and girls and young women at risk, the human rights group states today. The campaign is called the "Month of Awareness".

Also, a comprehensive training project is designed to prime Moroccan social workers and paralegals for administering permanent programs serving the community of girls and young women at risk and launching of 'Centres d'ecoute' in strategic locations across the country.

Events planned for the "Month of Awareness" include prevention, information, awareness raising, direct assistance, and advocacy activities that incorporate impact theatre pieces, videos, debates, discussions, round tables, open houses, support group meetings, awareness-raising civic caravans to rural areas, prison visits and women's human rights education sessions, the group informs.

The campaigns are concentrated to the country's main tourist destinations Agadir and Marrakech, the economic capital Casablanca, the capital Rabat and the towns of Essaouira, El Hajeb and Tétouan.



http://www.afrol.com/News2003/index_mor008.htm

Zwarte Schaap
13-12-03, 00:52
Zie daar de verwovenheden van de harde kapitalisme die losgelaten worden op een kwetsbare bevolking.

T.A.F.K.A.Z
13-12-03, 00:53
Dit is een bizar verhaal!





BOSTON GLOBE, April 25, 2000
Box 2378, Boston, MA, 02107
(Fax 617-929-2098 ) (E-MAIL:[email protected] )
( http://www.boston.com/globe )
Harassment preceded attack on T

By Francie Latour, Globe Staff

Three months after a Moroccan girl was attacked on an MBTA train, allegedly by classmates who thought she was gay, the state Attorney General's office yesterday said the 16-year-old was one of three Moroccan teens at Boston High School subjected to repeated harassment months before the incident on the T.

A fourth Moroccan girl ''was so terrified'' by the harassment - triggered when the girls followed a tradition of hand-holding customary in their homeland - that she returned to Morocco just six months after she had come to the United States to study.

''These young women came to this country for an education and instead were allegedly violently and repeatedly attacked because they were considered different,'' said Attorney General Thomas Reilly, whose office filed a civil complaint against three teenage girls arrested after the January MBTA attack.

But the civil complaint, which requests an injunction that would punish the three suspects with jail time if they harass people in the future, comes as a lawyer for one of the suspects says new evidence has surfaced in favor of his client.

And it comes as Boston school officials said the most significant example of prior harassment cited by the attorney general did not involve any of the girls arrested in the T attack, and was not triggered by antigay or anti-ethnic bias.

Steve Weymouth, an attorney for one of two 15-year-old girls charged in the attack, said last night that he was shocked at the charges leveled by the Attorney General's Office, and by the attempt to seek a civil rights injunction against his client.

Weymouth said two youth workers from City Year who witnessed part of the T incident and who broke up the fight have made statements to authorities that his client was not involved in the fight.

Weymouth's client, along with another juvenile and 17-year-old Nykesha Gant of Dorchester, were arrested in the January attack on an Orange Line train.

Prosecutors have charged the girls with four felony counts, including attempted rape, indecent assault of a child, assault with a dangerous weapon, and civil rights violations in a case that police and activists decried as an antigay and anti-ethnic hate crime. All three were expelled in February.

In a protracted incident that began on the train at the New England Medical Center stop and continued on a subway platform at State Street, prosecutors say Gant and the other suspects fondled the girl and tried to tear off her pants, at one point holding her arms apart and trying to molest her at knifepoint.

The girl managed to break free when a T patron intervened, authorities said.

Assistant Attorney General Suzanne Glick-Gilfix said yesterday her office uncovered a broader pattern of abuse in the course of investigating the alleged attack on the T.

Glick-Gilfix said that beginning in November 1999, a Moroccan girl was harassed while she worked at her computer at Boston High School and two Moroccan sisters were later assaulted in a school bathroom, leaving one of them with a bloody nose and broken glasses after she was thrown to the floor.

A few days later, she said, the other sister was attacked at the Arlington T stop on the Green Line.

Tracey Lynch, a Boston public schools spokeswoman, said school officials learned about the incident on the Arlington T stop after the January assault on the Orange Line.

But she said neither the incident in the girls' bathroom nor the alleged assault at the computer involved any of the girls arrested for the T attack and targeted in the attorney general's complaint.

Associated Press, April 24, 2000

Three girls accused of harassing Moroccan students face civil complaint

BOSTON (AP) - The state attorney general's office has filed a civil rights complaint against two female high school students who allegedly groped and ripped a Moroccan classmate's clothing because they thought she was gay.

The complaint, filed under the state's Civil Rights Act, accuses the two girls and another classmate of threats, intimidation and physical attacks on three Moroccan teen-age girls in the two months before the alleged attack on a subway train in January.

The alleged victims were the targets of anti-gay insults after they were seen holding hands, the attorney general's office said. Prosecutors said that they had moved to the United States six months ago from Morocco, where schoolgirls often hold hands.

One girl was kicked and beaten, the complaint alleges, suffering cuts and a bloody nose. One of the alleged victims was so scared that she returned to Morocco, the attorney general's office said.

Three girls were charged criminally in the alleged subway attack. At the time of the attack, police said they were looking for other suspects, and the attorney general's office would not identify the three girls included in the civil complaint and did not say if they are the same girls that were charged criminally.

A hearing on a preliminary injunction for the civil charges is scheduled for May 2. If the injunction is granted, it would serve as a kind of restraining order, keeping the alleged assailants away from the victims and providing for future punishment if the terms are violated, said Assistant Attorney General Suzanne Glick Gilfix.

Return to P.E.R.S.O.N. Project Home Page


Last updated 5/4/2000 by Jean Richter, [email protected]

TonH
13-12-03, 01:05
Dat tweede verhaal is echt bizar.

Ik zie echter niet wat het met het eerste van doen heeft. Dat verhaal vind ik eigenlijk heel positief: probleem geconstateerd - actie ondernomen. En dan niet restrictief, maar voorlichting gericht op de doelgroepen. Dus niet: flikker alle toeristen er uit, maar vertel de meisjes in welke (nieuwe) omgeving ze komen te verkeren.

Welcome to the modern world! Als dat al niet het geval was.

et_2000nl
13-12-03, 01:06
Welcome te the modern world. Helaas kun je de harde werkelijkheid van een verwesterde wereld, die ook veel goede dingen brengt, niet buitenhouden. :moe: Net zo min als een moslimzuil in nederland. De invloeden wederzijds kunnen voorspoed en neergang ten gevolge hebben....

Goede voorlichting lijkt me de oplossing, maar ja, over deze onderwerpen op scholen praten is nog een taboe....

et_2000nl
13-12-03, 01:14
Geplaatst door TonH
Dat tweede verhaal is echt bizar.

Ik zie echter niet wat het met het eerste van doen heeft. Dat verhaal vind ik eigenlijk heel positief: probleem geconstateerd - actie ondernomen. En dan niet restrictief, maar voorlichting gericht op de doelgroepen. Dus niet: flikker alle toeristen er uit, maar vertel de meisjes in welke (nieuwe) omgeving ze komen te verkeren.

Welcome to the modern world! Als dat al niet het geval was.

Scary..... Beide "Welcome to the modern world" gebruikt.... Terwijl ik jouw reply nog niet gelezen had....

TonH
13-12-03, 01:21
Geplaatst door et_2000nl
Scary..... Beide "Welcome to the modern world" gebruikt.... Terwijl ik jouw reply nog niet gelezen had....

Daar is toch een uitdrukking voor: ietst van syncrocinniedinges of zo. Anderen noemen het ware liefde. :koppel:

Zwarte Schaap
13-12-03, 01:27
Geplaatst door et_2000nl
Welcome te the modern world. Helaas kun je de harde werkelijkheid van een verwesterde wereld, die ook veel goede dingen brengt, niet buitenhouden. :moe: Net zo min als een moslimzuil in nederland. De invloeden wederzijds kunnen voorspoed en neergang ten gevolge hebben....

Goede voorlichting lijkt me de oplossing, maar ja, over deze onderwerpen op scholen praten is nog een taboe....

Die slechte duivelse eigenschappen kun je zeker wel buiten de deur houden als je je land beschermt tegen zakkenvullers en corruptie. Een staat die niet om haar burgers en geloof geeft maar alleen de matriele zaken aanbidt is hiervoor verantwoordelijk.