Yassine Belassal (right) and his father, Mohamed Belassal.
For replacing "God, The Nation, The King" with "God, The Nation, Barcelona" on the blackboard at school, a Moroccan football fan was condemned to 18 months in prison. His father tells us that after calling for an appeal, his son has now been released on bail but faces retrial on November 5.
Yassine Belassal risked paying a high price for his passion for FC Barcelona. The 18-year-old student thought it would be funny to rub out the end of the country's national slogan "Allah, Al Watan, Al Malik", (God, The Nation, The King) and replace it with "Barca" (God, The Nation, Barcelona); his favourite football club. His teacher didn't find it quite so funny. Reported and then arrested, Yassine was sentenced to 18 months imprisonment in a closed jail for insulting the king. On Wednesday, his father, Mohamed Belassal, told us that his son had managed to win the right to appeal and was to be released on bail until November 5. Until then, human rights groups, the Moroccan blogosphere, and even FC Barcelona, are campaigning for his acquittal.
Mohamed Belassal is Yassine's father. They live in Aït Ourir, near Marrakech.
Although
he's been released, I'm not relieved yet because the final judgement will come
on the 5th. Our lawyer has brought up several incoherencies with the
case and also the behaviour of the police, who beat my son at the police
station after he was arrested. Yassine is a good lad and he needs to prepare
for his exams. His future is in the hands of god. I am optimistic because he's
done nothing wrong and because the crowds of support at this morning's tribunal
reassured me about the state of justice in my country."
Youssef Jebri is a Moroccan author who has written several books about the country. He lives in Paris.
The affair of Yassine
Belassal is symbolic. It illustrates perfectly the lack of respect of
fundamental liberties in Morocco.
The rushed condemnation of Yassine was iniquitous and grotesque. To be thrown
in prison in 2008 for such a pathetic reason, after being harassed and condemned,
it's scandalous. It proves that we live in a regime where a culture of worship and
whistle-blowing is encouraged. The king might have changed but the regime and
the constitution stay the same. The slogan that Yassine altered touches on
three supreme taboos in Morocco:
god, patriotism and monarchy... If you question any of these three things you'll
end up in prison. I do hope this affair will have a happy ending, because
Yassine should be in school, not in prison."
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