A human rights group has criticised Morocco's truth commission for
not naming abuse perpetrators during the rule of the late King Hassan
II.
Nearly 17,000 people filed claims of abuse
|
The Moroccan Association for Human Rights has made its own list of those it wants prosecuted for the abuses.
It also queried the figures provided by the
investigating commission, which said 592 people were killed during the
repression of 1956 to 1999.
The panel's report by is the first of its kind in the Arab world.
The document - yet to be released in full - is the result of a two-year investigation.
The 17-member Equity and Reconciliation Committee (IER),
set up in January 2004, heard from 16,861 people, and assessed whether
victims should be given compensation and how much they should receive.
Human rights groups want those responsible to be named
|
A summary of the IER report said that it had recommended 9,280 victims were entitled to payments.
The commission found that 322 people had been shot dead
by government troops in protests, and that 174 people had died in
arbitrary detention.
The report said political figures opposed to King Hassan
II had also disappeared without trace, including the main opposition
leader in the 1960s, Mehdi Ben Barka.
The graves of 85 people, who had been detained in secret prisons, were also identified.
Disputed figures
While welcoming the report as a good start, the Moroccan
Association for Human Rights criticised its authors for not naming and
shaming the perpetrators of abuse.
Morocco's King Mohammed VI has authorised the report
|
The group also queried the IER's figures.
"The figures cited by the IER are far from the reality," the group's Abdullah Abdeslam said.
"According to the data we have, 1,500 people had been
killed in the protests of 21 March 1965, and between 500 and 1,000 died
in the protests of 1981."
Even before the IER publishes its report, the Moroccan
news agency, Map, has been detailing some of its content - and that
could only happen with the tacit approval at the highest official
level, the BBC's Africa editor David Bamford reports.
The IER report has urged the state to apologise to the
victims and their families, and King Mohammed VI - having authorised
the document - is likely to do this in the near future, our
correspondent says. |