(JTA) — An anti-Israel organization in Morocco published a list of people and institutions it accuses of collaborating with the Jewish state.
The Moroccan Observatory against Normalization with Israel published the list last week in its annual report for 2013, the news site Hespress.com reported.
Among the people named were Andre Azoulay, a Moroccan Jew and adviser to the king, Mohammed VI; Driss El Yazami, chairman of the National Human Rights Council; businessman Gabriel Banon; and Ibrahim el Fassi Fihri, founder of the Amadeus student exchange program.
They were listed for visiting Israel or working to further cooperation with the country, according to the report. Some of the individuals listed were identified as “symbols of the Zionist infiltration into Morocco.”
The observatory is described as an umbrella body representing groups and individuals who are working to end commerce and international ties between Israel and Morocco, one of the Arab world’s friendliest countries to Israel. Its spokesmen have said they seek to “put a price on collaboration with Israel.”
It was established last year when five political parties, including the Islamist ruling party, jointly sponsored two bills to make it illegal to trade with Israeli entities. At least one bill proposes to make it illegal for Israelis to enter Morocco, according Ya Biladi, a Moroccan daily newspaper.
One of the people on the list, Ali Ouidani, was described as a businessman from Goulmima in central Morocco who trades with Israel. Ouidani, who heads a civil society association involved in education, denied the assertions in an open letter he sent the observatory on Saturday.
His visit to the Israel two years ago, when he also toured the Knesset, focused on getting to know Moroccan-born Israelis, he wrote.
“We asked them why certain Jews of Moroccan origin belong to a party that supports exclusion, that expulses and occupies Arab territories, when in fact they were never subjected to such behavior in Morocco,” he wrote in his letter.
Some 250,000 Moroccan Jews left Morocco in the 19 years that followed Israel’s establishment in 1948. A few dozen Jews were killed in at least three pogroms that occurred between 1938 and 1954, according to Shmuel Trigano, a lecturer of political sociology at Paris X University Nanterre.
Zionism was outlawed in Morocco in 1959 and defined as a “serious crime.” Morocco ended that official animosity in the late 1980s and since then has maintained ties with Israel. In recent years, the royal house has undertaken the reconstruction of dozens of Jewish heritage sites.
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