Advertisement

We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

Morocco

Thousands attend funeral of fishmonger whose gruesome death in a rubbish truck provoked outrage

Mouhcine Fikri, a fishmonger, died in the crushing mechanism of the rubbish truck on Friday.

Morocco Protest A man carrying a poster of Mouhcine Fikri shouts as thousands of Moroccans protest against the gruesome death of the fishmonger last week Abdeljalil Bounhar Abdeljalil Bounhar

THOUSANDS OF MOROCCANS have attended the funeral of a fishmonger whose gruesome death in a rubbish truck crusher has caused outrage across the North African country, with authorities vowing to punish those responsible.

Mouhcine Fikri, 31, was crushed to death last Friday in the truck in the northern city of Al Hoceima as he reportedly tried to protest against a municipal worker seizing and destroying his wares.

An image of his inert body – head and arm sticking out from under the lorry’s crushing mechanism – went viral on social media, sparking calls for protests nationwide including in the capital Rabat.

Footage online showed thousands of people following the yellow ambulance that carried Fikri’s body through Al-Hoceima in the ethnically Berber Rif region.

Libertafree Liberta / YouTube

Interior Minister Mohamed Hassad condemned the incident and vowed that an investigation would be held to “determine the exact circumstances of the tragedy and punish those responsible”.

No one had the right to treat him like this… we cannot accept officials acting in haste, anger or in conditions that do not respect people’s rights,” he told AFP.

Funeral procession

The funeral procession was led by a dozen drivers in their cars – including taxis – and marchers waving Berber flags.

Morocco Protest A Moroccan woman shouts during the protest Abdeljalil Bounhar Abdeljalil Bounhar

The ambulance headed to the area of Imzouren some 20 kilometres (12 miles) southeast of the city, where Fikri was buried in the late afternoon.

The circumstances of his death remained unclear.

But a human rights activist told AFP that the authorities forced the fishmonger to destroy several boxes of swordfish. Catching swordfish using driftnets is illegal.

“The goods were worth a lot of money,” said Fassal Aoussar from the local branch of the Moroccan Association of Human Rights (AMDH).

“The salesman threw himself in after his fish and was crushed by the machine,” he said.

The whole of the Rif is in shock and boiling over.

‘Criminals, assassins, terrorists!’

Long neglected under the father of the current king, the Rif was at the heart of Morocco’s protest movement for change in 2011, dubbed the February 20 movement.

Protests continued in Al-Hoceima late last night, an AFP reporter said, with protesters shouting: “Criminals, assassins, terrorists!”

The people of the Rif won’t be humiliated!

The crowd eventually dispersed around 9.30pm Irish time without incident.

Thousands of demonstrators – including activists for Berber rights – also gathered in Rabat, chanting “We are all Mouhcine!”.

Smaller protests were held in several other Rif towns and, unusually, in Casablanca and Marrakesh.

In a statement, the AMDH condemned the state for “having trampled on the dignity of citizens since the ferocious repression of the February 20 movement and keeping the region in a state of tension”.

It warned of a “possible repeat” of the 2011 protests in the Rif, just a week before Morocco starts hosting international climate talks.

Morocco Protest Abdeljalil Bounhar Abdeljalil Bounhar

 

King Mohammed VI has ordered a “thorough and exhaustive investigation” into Fikri’s death and the “prosecution of whoever is found responsible”, an interior ministry statement said.

The king – who was in Zanzibar on a tour of East Africa – sent the interior minister to “present his condolences” to Fikri’s family, it said.

It was the self-immolation of a street vendor in Tunisia in late 2010 in protest at police harassment that sparked Tunisia’s revolution and the Arab Spring uprisings across the rest of the region the next year.

Morocco is due to host the COP22 climate talks in Marrakesh from 7 November to the 18 November.

© – AFP, 2016

Read: Clinton emails: FBI obtains warrant to investigate as director told he may have broken the law

Read: “Does the rest of the world want what’s best for us, or what’s best for them?”: The US election in Dublin, California

Your Voice
Readers Comments
16
    Submit a report
    Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
    Thank you for the feedback
    Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.