Morocco | Second week of protests against the vaccine passport

(Rabat) Several demonstrations took place again on Sunday across Morocco to protest against the anti-COVID-19 vaccine passport put in place by the government, according to AFP and local media.



In Rabat, the police squared the square where an unauthorized rally was to be held in the city center, with around 100 demonstrators dispersed in the neighboring alleys.

About twenty people were arrested.

If the opponents of the vaccine passport were less numerous in the capital than last week, they gathered in greater number in Tangier (north), according to videos broadcast by the local media Analkhabar.

“Down with the vaccine passport” chanted several hundred demonstrators in the port city.

In Casablanca, the economic megalopolis of the kingdom, the protesters were dispersed by the police who also proceeded to arrests, according to the information site Hespress.

However, it was not possible to quantify the total number of protesters or the number of arrests.

On October 21, Morocco launched an anti-COVID-19 vaccine passport, the first in a Maghreb country. All closed places, including hotels, restaurants, cafes, shops, sports halls and public baths are now subject to the passport requirement.

The passport is also required to access public, semi-public and private administrations, as well as to leave the kingdom or to travel between prefectures and provinces.

While a large majority of the population approves the vaccination, the mandatory nature of the passport to access public spaces has raised protests, especially on social networks.

An online petition has collected tens of thousands of signatures, criticizing the “arbitrary” establishment of the health passport.

Morocco, where the contaminations and deaths curve has been steadily decreasing for ten weeks, wants to immunize 80% of the population (or 30 million people). To date, more than 22.2 million Moroccans have received a second dose of the COVID-19 vaccine.


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