12. Juni 2015 · Kommentare deaktiviert für Marokko: amnesty international Mitarbeiter verhaftet und abgeschoben · Kategorien: Marokko, Spanien

Quelle: Deutschlandfunk

In Marokko sind zwei Mitarbeiter von Amnesty International verhaftet und des Landes verwiesen worden. Sie wollten vor Ort die Lage von Flüchtlingen untersuchen. Zur Begründung teilte das Innenministerium in Rabat mit, die beiden Ausländer hätten keine Erlaubnis für ihre Nachforschungen gehabt. Die Menschenrechtsorganisation widersprach dieser Darstellung. Den beiden Männern sei schriftlich und mündlich versichert worden, dass sie in Marokko ihrer Arbeit nachgehen könnten. Sie wollten Vorwürfe untersuchen, wonach Flüchtlinge von marokkanischen und spanischen Grenzbeamten misshandelt worden sein sollen. Marokko hat durch die beiden Exklaven Ceuta und Melilla eine Landgrenze zu Europa.

Quelle: Amnesty International

Amnesty International staff members expelled from Morocco

The expulsion of two Amnesty International experts from Morocco is a blatant attempt to prevent legitimate human rights research and muzzle criticism in the country, said Amnesty International.

Moroccan police held John Dalhuisen, Amnesty International’s Director for Europe and Central Asia and Irem Arf, Refugee and Migrant Rights Researcher, separately today. Both had their passports confiscated and were questioned at police stations in Rabat and Oujda, respectively, before they were put on separate flights to London and Paris.

“Morocco’s lofty words about being an open country have been exposed as hollow by their actions today,” said Anna Neistat, Amnesty International’s Senior Director for Research.

“The decision to expel our staff from Morocco as they began their investigations into the human rights situation of migrants and refugees raises serious suspicions that the authorities have something to hide.”

The decision to expel our staff from Morocco as they began their investigations into the human rights situation of migrants and refugees raises serious suspicions that the authorities have something to hide.
Anna Neistat, Amnesty International’s Senior Director for Research

The Amnesty International team was expelled despite having informed authorities of their planned visit. Amnesty International has received written and verbal assurances, most recently in May in a meeting with Moroccan officials, that the organization could visit the country without being required to obtain prior authorization. They had arrived in Morocco on Monday for a fact-finding visit to investigate the situation of migrants and refugees at Morocco’s northern borders with Spain.

Moroccan police stopped Irem Arf and her translator at around 11.40 in Oujda. Her passport was confiscated and she was held by police and questioned for hours including about whom she was intending to meet. She was then informed that she would have to leave the country. Around 14:00 she was driven to the airport where she remained under police observation until she was put on a flight departing to Paris.

John Dalhuisen was picked up in his hotel by police in the capital Rabat at around noon today. He was detained at a police station where he was questioned politely but for more than four hours. He received an expulsion order which gave as official grounds ‘a threat to public order’ and barred him from re-entering the country.

This is not the first time that Amnesty International’s work in Morocco has been hampered in recent months. In September 2014 the Moroccan authorities banned an Amnesty International youth camp, and denied entry to an Amnesty International fact-finding delegation the following month. A second fact-finding visit scheduled for November 2014 was cancelled by the organization after the Moroccan authorities sought to impose conditions on how it could operate.

Amnesty International was previously denied access to Morocco for three years, between 1990 and 1993. Since then the organization had not experienced any restrictions on visiting the country until October last year.

The relationship between the organization and Moroccan authorities deteriorated markedly after the launch of Amnesty International’s Stop Torture Campaign in 2014 which detailed Morocco’s continued use of torture.

“Moroccan authorities‘ attempts to thwart Amnesty International’s work in the country, and our ability to investigate alleged human rights abuses, takes place against a backdrop of growing restrictions on local human rights groups,” said Anna Neistat.

“Rather than expelling us, Moroccan authorities should show they have nothing to hide by granting human rights researchers unfettered access to those most vulnerable to abuse.”

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