Times of Israel Update Aug 6, 2013 Daniel Galvan Vina, convicted of raping 11 children, picked up after bureaucratic mix-up saw him get nearly a week of freedom
aljazeera. A demonstration ended in bloodshed and violence on Friday in Morocco
when hundreds of protesters gathered outside the parliament in Rabat in a
show of outrage over the royal pardoning of a convicted pedophile.
"The police hit everyone really hard. It was really violent," said
Houda Chaloun, 32, from Casablanca who was at the demonstration. "I have
never seen in the past two years such a violent repression of any kind
of gathering," she said in a phone interview.
Last Tuesday, 18 months after his sentencing, 63-year-old Daniel
Galvan was pardoned by Moroccan King Mohammed VI. Galvan is one of 48
Spanish prisoners, who were released from custody as a courtesy gesture
following the visit of Spanish monarch King Juan Carlos.
According to reports, protests were violently dispersed in several cities in Morocco on Friday evening.
The conviction of Galvan was the result of an unprecedented court
decision, validated by Morocco’s Supreme Court: the man accused of
abusing 11 children was sentenced to 30 years in prison in a country
where sentences against pedophiles have often been minimal.
"The pardon threw away one of the most important court decisions in
the history of Morocco," Hamid Krayri, the victim’s lawyer told Al
Jazeera. "This man took advantage of vulnerable, poor children and it
was the first time a pedophile got such a harsh sentence in Morocco." [...]