Moroccans convicted for drinking juice during Ramadan

Four youths arrested in Morocco for drinking fruit juice in public during the daylight hours of the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan received suspended four-month jail terms on Tuesday, a rights group has said.

"This verdict is courageous even though we would have liked them to be cleared," Omar Arbib, of the Moroccan Association for Human Rights, told AFP. He was referring to the leniency of the sentence: under Moroccan law, the offence can carry a penalty of up to six months behind bars. A fifth young person, under the age of 18, is due before a juvenile court on the same charge on Friday.

Throughout Ramadan, which ends this week, believers are supposed to abstain from eating, drinking, smoking and having sex from dawn until sunset.

The five were arrested on 6 July in Marrakesh, one of the kingdom's main tourist destinations. They had been taking a friend to the airport, but it "seems the heat pushed them to buy fruit juice from sellers in Jamaa El Fna Square, where they drank it in public", Arbib said. He said other juice-sellers there had alerted the police.

Penal reform currently at the debate stage, if implemented, will retain jail terms for public breaking of the fast during Ramadan. But it also says that a maximum fine of 10,000 dirhams (€925) can be imposed instead.    (AFP)

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