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Morocco pardons journalist Hajar Raissouni jailed on abortion charges | Morocco pardons journalist Hajar Raissouni jailed on abortion charges |
(about 11 hours later) | |
A Moroccan journalist sentenced to a year in jail for premarital sex and having an abortion has been pardoned by King Mohammed VI, officials say. | A Moroccan journalist sentenced to a year in jail for premarital sex and having an abortion has been pardoned by King Mohammed VI, officials say. |
The justice ministry said the king's intervention in the high-profile case was "an act of compassion and mercy". | The justice ministry said the king's intervention in the high-profile case was "an act of compassion and mercy". |
Journalist Hajar Raissouni, 28, made a victory sign as she left a prison on Wednesday together with her fiancé, who was also pardoned. | Journalist Hajar Raissouni, 28, made a victory sign as she left a prison on Wednesday together with her fiancé, who was also pardoned. |
Activists say her case is part of a crackdown on independent reporters. | Activists say her case is part of a crackdown on independent reporters. |
Premarital sex and abortions are illegal in Morocco. | Premarital sex and abortions are illegal in Morocco. |
Ms Raissouni works for the Akhbar Al-Yaoum daily, a newspaper critical of the authorities. | Ms Raissouni works for the Akhbar Al-Yaoum daily, a newspaper critical of the authorities. |
She was with her Sudanese fiancé as they left a gynaecologist's clinic in the capital Rabat in August. She denied all the charges, saying she had sought treatment for internal bleeding. | She was with her Sudanese fiancé as they left a gynaecologist's clinic in the capital Rabat in August. She denied all the charges, saying she had sought treatment for internal bleeding. |
Ms Raissouni, who later denounced the case against her as a "political trial", was sentenced in September. | Ms Raissouni, who later denounced the case against her as a "political trial", was sentenced in September. |
The prosecutor in the case said the circumstances of the journalist's arrest had nothing to do with her work as a journalist, and that the clinic she had visited was under police surveillance on suspicion of carrying out illegal abortions. | The prosecutor in the case said the circumstances of the journalist's arrest had nothing to do with her work as a journalist, and that the clinic she had visited was under police surveillance on suspicion of carrying out illegal abortions. |
The court sentenced her fiancé to a year in prison and her doctor to two years. The doctor's assistant and a nurse at the clinic were also found guilty but were given suspended sentences. | The court sentenced her fiancé to a year in prison and her doctor to two years. The doctor's assistant and a nurse at the clinic were also found guilty but were given suspended sentences. |
Ms Raissouni told AFP news agency she believed her case had raised a "healthy and useful" debate, and called for gay sex and other jailable offences, such as eating in public during Ramadan, to be to be decriminalised. |
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