The Moroccan Parliament decided Monday to reconsider its ties with the European Parliament and subject them to a comprehensive evaluation after the EU legislature criticised the state of press freedoms in Morocco.
The decision followed an extraordinary joint plenary session of Morocco's two houses of Parliament in Rabat on Monday that was convened to address the European Parliament's resolution from last week.
The Moroccan legislators called the resolution an unacceptable attack on the kingdom's sovereignty and the independence and sanctity of its judicial institutions, according to a joint parliamentary statement read out by the speaker of the House of Representatives, Rachid Talbi Alami.
Last week, EU legislators approved a non-binding resolution calling on Moroccan authorities to improve their respect of freedom of expression and media freedom.
The resolution said press freedom in the North African kingdom has been continuously deteriorating, and called for a fair trial with all due process guarantees for imprisoned journalists, including Omar Radi, Soulaimane Raissouni and Taoufik Bouachrine.
Such resolutions do not force EU member states to act, but are a broad indication of how the bloc of 450 million people feels about certain issues.
More From This Section
The vote was 356-32 with 42 abstentions.
The Moroccan Parliament said the resolution broke trust and hurt progress that had been made over many years.
It described Morocco as a long-standing and trustworthy partner that plays a major role in protecting rights and freedoms and defending regional and international peace and security, according to the statement.
It added that the kingdom will never accept guardianship or lessons from anyone.
The Parliament defended judges' decisions in the cases mentioned by the European resolution, saying they had nothing to do with journalism or freedom of speech but were about crimes such as sexual assault and taking advantage of people's weaknesses.
Radi, a prominent investigative journalist and activist, was convicted in 2021 on charges of espionage and sexual assault and sentenced to six years in prison.
Radi denies wrongdoing, and rights groups say the charges were politically motivated.
Radi was the subject of an Amnesty International report in June 2020 that said Moroccan authorities had unlawfully spied on the journalist through his phone by using sophisticated surveillance software.
The Moroccan government disputed the claim.
Raissouni, also mentioned in the European resolution, was sentenced to five years in prison for sexual assault, and Bouachrine has been sentenced to 15 years in prison for sexual offenses, according to media watchdog Reporters Without Borders.
The EU resolution condemns what it calls Morocco's misuse of allegations of sexual assault to deter journalists from performing their duties, warning that such misuse endangers women's rights.
It also raised concerns about allegations that Moroccan authorities sought to bribe European Parliament members as part of a broad influence-buying scandal also involving allegations against Qatar.
Belgian prosecutors are investigating the allegations, part of a sweeping corruption scandal that has deeply shaken the EU.
The United States, a Moroccan ally, has in the past also voiced concerns about Morocco's treatment of journalists.