Young men from the North African nation have been involved in deadly attacks in Paris and Brussels, and just last week emerged as suspects in violence in Spain and Finland.
The Islamic State group has claimed responsibility. In the days after attacks on Barcelona's famed Las Ramblas and a seaside resort killed 15 people, shocked and horrified relatives and friends of the suspects gathered with the Muslim community in their Spanish town of Ripoll to denounce terrorism.
The 12-member cell accused of carrying out the attacks in Spain was made up of brothers and childhood friends from Ripoll young men described as integrated, well-liked and responsible members of their tight-knit community.
"Pilot, teacher, doctor .... How could this have disappeared? What happened to you?" their school counselor, Raquel Rull, wrote in a despairing column published today in La Vanguardia newspaper.
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"What are we doing to make these things happen! You were so young, so full of life you had a lifetime ahead ... And a thousand dreams to fulfill."
His grandfather, Aqbouch Abouyaaqoub, told the Spanish newspaper El Pais that Younes left Morocco as a young boy.
"But one thing is certain: My grandson did not finish his studies here. He studied in Spain," he said.
Prominent Moroccan Islam expert Bilal Talidi cited multiple causes for radicalisation among Moroccans after moving to Europe: "the tug-of-war between two identities and two educational cultures, social marginalization, a precarious economic situation and a criminal record."
Politicians and experts decry the government's failure to grasp the scope of young Moroccans' problems at home and in immigrant communities abroad, and are searching for ways to infuse their countrymen everywhere with this message of religious moderation.
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