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Morocco: Moroccan journalist Omar Radi arrested Sunday evening

2020-07-07T06:15:31.586Z


At the heart of a double spy case, the investigative journalist was arrested for "public intoxication and violence".


Moroccan journalist and human rights activist Omar Radi, at the heart of a double spy case, was arrested Sunday evening for "public intoxication and violence" then placed in police custody in Casablanca, we learned on Monday with the spokesperson for national security (DGSN).

"He was placed in police custody on the instruction of the prosecution after an incident that occurred at around 11:30 pm yesterday evening," said the spokesman.

Moroccan justice announced last week that it had opened an investigation into this journalist whom she suspects of benefiting from "foreign funding" in connection with "intelligence services". The Moroccan authorities suspect him of "links with a liaison officer from a foreign country" who has worked "under diplomatic cover since 1979 in several regions of tension" around the world.

"I have never been and will never be in the service of a foreign power [...] I am neither a spy nor an agent paid by a foreign fund", reacted the journalist in a press release published Saturday on his Facebook account . According to him, his activities "have nothing to do with the intelligence world": "it is very commonplace that journalists, especially those specializing in economics provide the type of work" that he is accused of.

"Serious and tendentious accusations"

The investigation into him was opened after the publication of an Amnesty International report that his phone was being spied on by hacking software used by the Moroccan authorities. The Moroccan authorities have refuted this report by demanding that Amnesty provide "evidence" of these "serious and tendentious accusations", threatening failing to "take the necessary measures to defend its national security".

Amnesty believes that it has provided all the relevant evidence: "the technology used to spy on Omar Radi's telephone requires an influence on telephone operators that only a government can exercise to be able to hack the internet connection," the organization said. in a statement released on Saturday. At this stage, the Moroccan authorities believe, however, that the information provided by Amnesty is not "convincing scientific evidence", according to an official statement issued on Sunday evening.

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Omar Radi, a 33-year-old journalist known for his investigative investigations, was sentenced to a four-month suspended prison sentence in March for criticizing a judge on Twitter.

Source: leparis

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