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Moroccan women acquitted over indecency charges for wearing Mini Skirts

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morrocco women
The women were arrested on 16 June in a market after being heckled by market traders.

 

Two Moroccan women have been acquitted of ‘Gross indecency’ charges after they went on trial for wearing short skirts.

The women were arrested on 16 June in a market in Inezgane, near Agadir, after being heckled by market traders.

Their case sparked a national outcry and an internet petition calling the arrest an attack on personal freedom attracted thousands of signatures.

“This is a victory not only for these two women but for all members of civil society who mobilized,” said defense attorney Houcine Bekkar Sbai.

Fouzia Assouli, head of the LDDF women’s rights organization, confirmed the acquittals handed down by a court in the southern city of Agadir.

“This acquittal is positive and shows that wearing this type of clothing (a dress) is not a crime,” Assouli told AFP.

The women, hairdressers aged 23 and 29, were arrested on June 16 as they strolled through the open-air market in Inezgane, a suburb of Agadir, on their way to work,

Hundreds of lawyers offered to defend the women in court.

Women’s rights campaigner Fouzia Assouli told the AFP news agency the acquittal showed that wearing a skirt “is not a crime”.

Merchants accused them of wearing flimsy and “immoral” clothes, surrounded and heckled them, media reported at the time.

Police intervened to wrest them away from the angry crowd but then drove them to a police station where they were charged with gross indecency.

Article 483 of Morocco’s penal code states that anyone found guilty of committing an act of “public obscenity” such as “gross indecency” can be jailed for between a month and two years.

Their case sparked an outcry in Morocco, where supporters of the two women held rallies denouncing their arrest and demanding their release, requests echoed in a petition that circulated online.

Hundreds of lawyers also offered to defend them while rights organizations kept a close tab on the proceedings.

Assouli said that Monday’s verdict should prompt lawmakers to revise Article 483 of the penal code and adopt a law criminalizing violence against women.

Earlier this month, police arrested of two men “accused of aggressing the women.” They have been referred to trial and could face prison terms from one month to two years if found guilty.

 

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