#MeToo wave in Morocco over 'sex for grades' scandal
Female Moroccan university students have broken their
silence about professors demanding sexual favours in return for good grades, a
scandal that has shaken the higher eduction system.
Testimonies have flooded social media in the style of the
#MeToo movement, encouraged by activists in the conservative North African
nation where victims of sexual violence often keep quiet.
"I was expelled from university a year ago under the
pretext that I had cheated on an exam," said 24-year-old student Nadia,
who declined to give her full name.
"The truth is that I had just refused to submit to
sexual blackmail from one of my professors."
The Hassan I University in Settat, near Casablanca, where
she was eventually re-admitted, is now embroiled in a scandal involving five
professors.
One was sentenced to a two-year prison term this month for
demanding sexual favours for good grades, in the first such verdict, while four
others are due to face court Monday.
"My case was not an isolated one," said Nadia.
"Other girls suffered similar things but no one wanted to listen to
us."
In recent years, several similar cases were reported by
local media, but failed to elicit official action.
But then a social media campaign shifted the conversation,
raising awareness of the magnitude of the problem.
'Wave of testimonies'
The turning point came when screen shots were published
online, said to be of messages in which professors demanded sexual favours from
female students.
"I had not considered making a complaint, but after the
scandal broke, I filed a civil suit," Nadia said.
"My move is also a way of encouraging other victims to
denounce these acts."
One association that helped bring some of the scandals to
light was "7achak" -- an expression in local dialect used to excuse
oneself before broaching a taboo topic.
The movement launched an Instagram page calling on women
victims of harassment to share their stories.
"As soon as the appeal was launched, we received a wave
of testimonies," the association's founder Sarah Benmoussa told AFP.
"Those accompanied with evidence were published."
More accusations against university lecturers began to
emerge online.
"I am speaking to you to stop the sexual harassment and
the rotten and unacceptable acts of a monster disguised as an instructor,"
wrote a former student of the National School of Business and Management in
Oujda.
Other victims also shared their experiences involving that
professor, resulting in his suspension.
Some officials at the business school, deemed
"complicit", were also dismissed, the higher education ministry said
last month.
'Zero tolerance'
In Tangiers, an instructor at a school of translation was
convicted and sentenced to jail in early January over sexual harassment, lawyer
Aicha Guellaa told AFP.
According to her, "nearly 70 complaints" were also
filed at the Abdelmalek Essaadi University of Tetouan, but have so far failed
to provoke a response from the university administration.
The reports of sexual harassment in academia sparked an
uproar among activists, online and in the local media across Morocco.
They prompted Higher Education Minister Abdelatif Miraoui to
pledge "zero tolerance" for sexual harassment.
As the number of testimonies grew, several universities
launched toll-free hotlines and set up teams to follow up on cases of sexual
violence.
"It's crucial to support the victims and to help them
gain access to the judicial system," said human rights defender Karima
Nadir of the "Outlaws" group.
In 2018, after years of fierce debate, a law entered into
force, imposing for the first time prison sentences for "harassment,
assault, sexual exploitation or abuse".
"Laws exist," Nadir said, "but few benefit
from them."
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