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Last Updated: Monday, 8 September, 2003, 12:30 GMT 13:30 UK
Morocco victims press for aid
By Sebastian Usher
BBC correspondent, Rabat

The families of the Moroccan victims of the Casablanca bombings last May are forming a pressure group to ask the government for financial help they say they were promised and have not received.

Nearly four months after the attacks in which 33 people died, apart from the suicide bombers, the families say they are facing major financial difficulties after losing, in many cases, their main breadwinner.

Bomb debris from one of the five simultaneous attacks that hit Casablanca
Twelve suicide bombers were among the 45 who died
In the immediate aftermath of the attacks on 16 May, King Mohammed pledged to ensure that the victims' families would be provided for by the state.

In the months since then, the relatives say all of they have received is a single donation of about $5,000 for each family from the king himself.

This they received on the 40th day after the attacks, along with a personal letter of condolence from the king.

At the moment in Morocco, there is no state mechanism to provide automatically for victims of attacks like those in May.

Election timing

Despite the orders of the king, the notorious sluggishness of the Moroccan bureaucracy has meant that nothing on a government level has yet been done for the families.

Now, in a series of interviews given to the media in Morocco, timed to coincide with the local elections taking place this week, the relatives have bemoaned their inability to provide for their families.

Damaged Belgian consulate in Casablanca
The deadly attacks were blamed on extremists
They say they need money urgently for basic expenses now that the breadwinner in the family is gone.

The families say the idea of setting up an official group to protect their rights is to give them more sway with the authorities than they have as individuals.

They also say that such an association will give them a more powerful voice in keeping the memory of their losses alive amongst the Moroccan public.

At least one newspaper in Morocco has already taken up their case and demanded that the authorities provide the families with an official state pension, saying it is the very minimum the government should do.


SEE ALSO:
Casablanca suspects go on trial
21 Jul 03  |  Africa
Q&A: Assessing the terror alerts
21 May 03  |  Middle East
In pictures: Casablanca blasts
17 May 03  |  Photo Gallery
Terror blasts rock Casablanca
17 May 03  |  Africa


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