What is the structure of the Moroccan police? Is an organization called the police civile a branch of the Moroccan police? [MAR0094]
The national police force in Morocco is comprised of four sections;
the Urban Corps, the Judiciary Police, the Mobile Intervention
Companies, and the Internal Security Service. [George Thomas
Kurian, ed., Encyclopedia of the Third World, vol. 2 ( New
York: Facts on file, Inc., 1987), p. 1387. ]
Although the Judiciary Police(la police judiciaire) is the only
division of the police force empowered to make arrests, there are
persistent allegations that many arrests of political dissidents
are made by unidentified persons in civilian dress. [Amnesty
International, Report of an Amnesty International Mission to the
Kingdom of Morocco; 10-13 February 1981, (London: 1981), p. 15.] It
is assumed that these arrests are made by members of the Internal
Security Service. Members of the ISS operating in this manner could
possibly constitute an informal organization that is independent
from the Judiciary Police. The Moroccan government, however, does
not release information about the operation of the ISS and,
therefore, it is impossible to determine whether a force known as
the police civile is a division within the ISS. [Kurian, p.
1387.]
There are no special provisions for political offenses in Moroccan
law and political detainees are held in ordinary prisons during
their pre-trial period. [ Amnesty, Amnesty International Briefing:
Morocco, (London: October 1977), p. 10 ] One of the main prisons in
Casablanca is called the Prison Civile. [ Ibid.] There could
possibly be some confusion over the jurisdiction of the Judiciary
Police and the authorities of the Prison Civile, hence the
emergence of the term Police Civile.
Endnotes