Tens of thousands of people took to the streets of Moroccoโs capital Rabat on Sunday to demonstrate against the jailing of leaders of a protest movement in the predominantly Berber region of Rif.
Carrying pictures of the detained activists and waving Berber blue, green, yellow and red flags, demonstrators chanted โFreedom, dignity and social justiceโ, โLong live the Rifโ, and โThe people want immediate release of Rif detainees.โ
A court in Casablanca in June sentenced 39 people, including protest leader Nasser Zefzafi, to terms of up to 20 years in jail in connection with a protest movement that shook Morocco in late 2016 and early 2017.
The protests erupted after a fishmonger was crushed inside a rubbish truck while trying to recover fish confiscated by police in the northern city of Al-Hoceima in October 2016.
Detainees and their families had called for Sundayโs march, which brought together Berber (Amazigh) groups, leftist opposition parties, human rights groups and the banned Islamist movement Al-Adl wal-Ihsan.
Detaineesโ relatives, exhausted by a 12-hour bus journey from Al-Hoceima to Rabat, expressed grief and frustration as they marched.
โWe will keep up our protests until the release of our sons,โ Zefzafiโs mother Zoulikha told Reuters.
Addressing crowds that activists said numbered at least 30,000, Zefzafiโs father, Ahmed, invoked post-independence grievances and marginalisation in the Rif region and denounced what he called a political verdict.
โRif is uniting Morocco in this march,โ he said. Authorities did not give an estimate of the size of the demonstration.
The Al-Hoceima demonstrations, along with protests in the mining town of Jerada in early 2018, marked the biggest unrest in Morocco since Arab Spring protests in 2011 prompted King Mohammed VI to devolve some of his powers to an elected parliament.
After the Rif protests the king dismissed three ministers and various other officials over a lack of progress in a development plan for the Rif.
Ahmed Dgherni, one of the founders of the Berber (Amazigh) movement, called the march โa popular referendum that united different political trendsโ to back the cause of freedom.
โThe security approach adopted by the state derailed the peaceful protests in the Rif, leading to confrontations and arrests,โ he told Reuters.
Senior Al-Adl wal-Ihsan leader Omar Amkasso said the march was โto call for the immediate release of activists and the development of Moroccoโs marginalised regionsโ.
After last monthโs verdicts, a lawyer representing the state said the sentences were lenient and that some of the accused had been indicted for serious crimes including attacking law enforcement officers.
Lawyers of Rif activists say they will appeal against the sentences.