Moroccan authorities prevented a protest in the capital Rabat against the kingdom’s move to normalize ties with the Zionist entity.
Local sources said that Rabat refused to authorize an anti-normalization demonstration scheduled for Monday in front of parliament.
A heavy police presence backed by water cannons and anti-riot forces deployed in the main avenue leading to Parliament square, where a group of pro-Palestinian rights organizations had planned the sit-in, according to Reuters news agency.
Two prominent activists, Sion Assidon, Morocco coordinator for the international Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement, and lawyer Abderrahman Ben Amrou, were escorted away by authorities and asked to leave the area.
Six Moroccan associations have issued a joint statement describing the move as a “dangerous development”.
The associations said they considered that “the official Maghreb, Arab and African regimes are providing free services to the Zionist entity (Israel) at a time when it should have become necessary to impose international sanctions and isolate it”.
On Thursday, Morocco’s King Mohammed VI announced that official bilateral ties and diplomatic relations with the Israeli regime were to be established “as soon as possible,” according to a statement issued by the royal court.
Source: Agencies