Moroccans protest Arab nations normalising ties with Israel

Despite a government ban on large gatherings to prevent the spread of the coronavirus, scores of demonstrators protested outside the Moroccan Parliament to denounce Arab countries agreeing to normalise ties with Israel.

Israel on Tuesday signed historic diplomatic pacts with the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain in a US-brokered deal. Morocco was reported to be among other Arab countries considering a similar move, though the prime minister rejected the idea last month.

Protesters in Morocco's capital of Rabat on Friday waved Palestinian flags, decrying the deals as "treason" and chanting "Palestine is not for sale".

The Palestinians view the pacts as a stab in the back from their fellow Arabs in the Gulf and a betrayal of their cause for a Palestinian state. Israel and Bahrain's agreements have been condemned by many across the Arab world.

The protesters in Rabat also burned a mock Israeli flag. Dozens of police officers watched the scene from a distance.

Organisers interrupted the chanting occasionally to urge participants to wear masks and to respect social distancing rules. "The normalisation deals are an attack on the Palestinian people and their cause," said human rights activist Abdelhamid Amine.

"We are calling on the Moroccan government not to follow suit and we urge it not to surrender to the Zionist and imperialist pressure like other Arab countries," said Amine, former president of the Moroccan Association of Human Rights and one of the rally organisers. Last month, Moroccan Prime Minister Saad Eddine El Othmani said the kingdom rejects any form of normalisation with Israel.

"The Moroccan monarch, government and people will always defend the rights of the Palestinian people and Al-Aqsa Mosque," he said in a meeting with his Islamist party Justice and Development Party (PJD).  (AP)