verbalresistance:

Moroccans burn selves in unemployment protest

Five unemployed university graduates burned during demonstration as new government unveils plan to improve economy.

Five unemployed Moroccan men have set themselves on fire in the capital Rabat as part of widespread demonstrations in the country over the lack of jobs, especially for university graduates, a rights activist said.

Three were burned badly enough to be hospitalised, two of them were in serious condition, he said.

The Moroccans were part of the “unemployed graduates” movement, a loose collections of associations across the country filled with millions of university graduates demanding jobs. The demonstrations are often violently dispersed by police and in some towns and cities have resulted in sustained clashes.

Around 160 members of the movement have been occupying an administrative building of the Ministry of Higher Education for the past two weeks in Rabat. Supporters would bring them food until two days ago, when security forces stopped them.

Second-degree burns

“The authorities prevented them from receiving food and water, so five people went outside to get food and threatened to set themselves on fire if they were stopped,” Youssef al-Rissouni of the Moroccan Association for Human Rights said on Thursday.

A video published by the group online shows a crowd tossing bread over the heads of police towards a building. Several young men on the building then douse themselves with a liquid and jump down and begin collecting the bread.

When riot police armed with truncheons move to stop them, at least two of the men burst into flames and begin running around wildly before they are surrounded by supporters and the flames apparently smothered.

Photos afterwards showed men with large sections of their skin burned. The online newspaper Goud reported that two of the men had second degree burns and were going to be sent to the Casablanca burn unit…

While the official unemployment rate is only 9.1 per cent nationally, it is around 16 per cent for graduates and 31.4 per cent for those under 34 years old…

The self-immolation of Tunisia’s Mohammed Bouazizi in the hardscrabble town of Sidi Bouzid in December 2010 became the symbol of the depths of despair to which the poor of North Africa and the Middle East have sunk. Last week, four more people set themselves on fire in Tunisia, including a father of three who died from his burns…

Read More: aljazeera.net

Reblogged from The Great Perhaps
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  12. sharquaouia said: It’s really bad. They’ve been protesting for weeks now and the past few days, police crackdown is getting worse. My dad is there right now and what’s even more sad, he tells me, is the passive and dismissive reaction of bystanders.
  13. verbalresistance posted this