Nasser Zafzafi (Wikipedia) |
The ruling against the 42 protesters in the western city of Casablanca was met with cries of "corrupt state" from relatives. The Al-Hirak al-Shaabi, or "Popular Movement", protests took hold in the country's marginalised Rif region in October 2016.The social unrest was sparked by the death of a fisherman who was crsuihed to death in a garbage truck and escalated into a wave of demonstrations demanding more development in the neglected region and railing against corruption and unemployment.
Authorities accused the activists of having separatist aims.
The sentences were first handed down in June last year, prompting further demonstrations calling for the group's release, backed by human rights organisation such as Amnesty and Human Rights Watch.
The movement's leader Nasser Zafzafi and three others received prison terms of 20 years for threatening the security of the state. Other sentences also confirmed on appeal ranged from one to 15 years. Eleven others were pardoned last year by King Mohammed VI. Journalist Hamid el Mahdaoui was sentenced to three years for failing to tell police he had been offered weapons during the protests -- what he called an "imaginary crime".
"It's an injustice," his wife told AFP.
Zafzafi, 39, emerged as the face of the movement as a result of his rallying speeches, accusing the authorities of corruption. Amnesty International has said the activist was held in solitary confinement and subjected to "conditions tantamount to torture". He boycotted the appeal proceedings along with 37 other defendants, after denouncing the first case as a "political trial".
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