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Saida El Alami sentenced to three years in prison

Status: 
Sentenced
About the situation

On 16 September 2025, woman human rights defender and blogger Saida El Alami was sentenced by the Criminal Court of Ain Sebaa in Casablanca to three years in prison and a fine of 200,000 dirhams (18,700 euros). She was convicted on charges of “insulting a legally constituted body,” “insulting the judiciary,” and “publishing and broadcasting false allegations.”

On 15 July 2025, the Moroccan woman human rights defender and blogger Saida EL Alami appeared before the Casablanca Court of First Instance while on a hunger and water strike. According to her defence team, Saida El Alami’s strike is a protest against her arbitrary arrest and deprivation of legal counsel during her court appearance in early July.

About the HRD

Saida EL Alami is a woman human rights defender and blogger from Morocco who has been engaging in social media and peaceful protests to denounce the abuse of power, corruption, and the repression of freedom of expression and opinion. Arrested in 2022 and sentenced in two separate cases to a total of three years in prison and a fine, Saida EL Alami was granted a royal pardon and released in July 2024. Despite the imprisonment, her commitment to justice and freedom remained unwavering.

17 September 2025
Saida El Alami sentenced to three years in prison

On 16 September 2025, woman human rights defender and blogger Saida El Alami was sentenced by the Criminal Court of Ain Sebaa in Casablanca to three years in prison and a fine of 200,000 dirhams (18,700 euros). She was convicted on charges of “insulting a legally constituted body,” “insulting the judiciary,” and “publishing and broadcasting false allegations.”

The verdict has drawn widespread criticism from Moroccan human rights organisations, including the Moroccan Committee for the Support of Political Prisoners (HIMAM), which described the judgment as part of a broader pattern of criminalising peaceful expression. They noted that the continued use of the penal code to silence critical voices undermines the right to freedom of opinion and expression guaranteed under Article 25 of the Moroccan Constitution and Article 19 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, as ratified by Morocco.

On 1 July 2025, Saida El Alami was arrested and taken into police custody in Casablanca by the National Judicial Police Brigade. She was held for a preliminary investigation before being presented to the Prosecutor of the Ain Sebaa Primary Court on 3 July 2025, who ordered her detention pending trial. The Moroccan Association for Human Rights (AMDH) condemned her arrest as arbitrary and linked to her peaceful expression of concern about due process violations and the increasing use of legislation to restrict freedom of expression.

18 July 2025
Morocco: Saida EL Alami on hunger strike over her arrest for exposing corruption and human rights violations

On 15 July 2025, the Moroccan woman human rights defender and blogger Saida EL Alami appeared before the Casablanca Court of First Instance while on a hunger and water strike. According to her defence team, Saida El Alami’s strike is a protest against her arbitrary arrest and deprivation of legal counsel during her court appearance in early July.

Download the urgent appeal

Saida EL Alami is a woman human rights defender and blogger from Morocco who has been engaging in social media and peaceful protests to denounce the abuse of power, corruption, and the repression of freedom of expression and opinion. Arrested in 2022 and sentenced in two separate cases to a total of three years in prison and a fine, Saida EL Alami was granted a royal pardon and released in July 2024. Despite the imprisonment, her commitment to justice and freedom remained unwavering.

On 1 July 2025, Moroccan security authorities arrested Saida EL Alami without warning or prior notice as she walked down the street. The Moroccan Association for Human Rights (AMDH) reported in their statement that she had not committed a criminal offence, yet was taken into custody and subjected to a preliminary investigation by the National Judicial Police in Casablanca.

On the morning of 3 July, she was brought before the King's Prosecutor at the Ain Sebaa Court of First Instance, where she was detained on charges of “insulting a legally organised body, disseminating false allegations and insulting the judiciary”. Although her trial was initially scheduled to occur immediately, it was postponed to 8 July. According to her defence team, Saida EL Alami refused to attend the hearing on 8 July to protest against her deprivation of the right to a lawyer when she appeared before the King's Prosecutor.

On 15 July, when she appeared in Court, Saida EL Alami announced that she had been on a hunger and water strike since the previous day. Her defence team emphasises that this decision was made to protest the circumstances of her arrest and the subsequent violations of both Moroccan laws and international standards that guarantee freedom of opinion and expression. Reportedly, Saida EL Alami agreed to drink water at the end of the hearing after both the Court and her defence team urged her to end the strike. The Court granted her defence team a postponement to prepare her defence, with the next hearing scheduled for 23 July 2025.

Front Line Defenders condemns the arbitrary arrest, prosecution, and detention of Saida El Alami, believing it to be direct reprisal by the authorities in Morocco for her legitimate and peaceful work as a human rights defender and blogger. The prosecution of Saida El Alami reflects a broader trend of restrictions on the right to freedom of expression and assembly, along with harassment and reprisals against human rights defenders and peaceful activists in Morocco.

Front Line Defenders urges the authorities in Morocco to:

  1. Immediately and unconditionally release woman human rights defender and blogger Saida El Alami;
  2. Cease the targeting of human rights defenders in Morocco;
  3. Ensure that all human rights defenders in Morocco can carry out their human rights activities and exercise their right to freedom of expression without fear of reprisals, in line with Morocco’s international human rights obligations and commitments.