Between 2000 and 2007, with the appearance in the scene of a few independent francophone magazines, such as Tel Quel and Le Journal Hebdomadaire and their sister Arabic counterparts (i.e. Assahifa Al Ousbouia), government control over the media has moved somewhat from direct intervention to more subtle pressures, such as the use of lawsuits and libel cases.
Morocco | European Court of Human Rights | Human Rights Watch | human | Human sexuality | United States Department of Health and Human Services | Human swimming | Human | The Human League | European Convention on Human Rights | Mohammed VI of Morocco | Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development | Human Genome Project | Equal Rights Amendment | Digital rights management | Center for Constitutional Rights | Human migration | women's rights | Human leukocyte antigen | Convention on the Rights of the Child | Human skull | Universal Declaration of Human Rights | human trafficking | Human Rights Campaign | Civil Rights Act of 1964 | Human Torch | Human resources | human eye | Nazi human experimentation | Morocco national football team |
Christine Daure-Serfaty is a writer and a French human rights activist, who distinguished herself in Morocco where she embraced the fight of the victims of King Hassan II, during the "Years of Lead," and from afar, played a major role in the evolution of the regime and the human rights in Morocco.