person:mounia bennani-chraïbi

  • Scholars in solidarity with Ismail Alexandrani

    Ismail Alexandrani was detained by Egyptian authorities on November 30th as he was coming back to his country to visit his sick mother. Alexandrani is one of Egypt’s brightest young researchers, who has spent the last few years doing ground-breaking work on the marginalized areas of Egypt – a blind spot in academic studies of the country – as well as on political Islam. His articles have featured in numerous publications and have been presented in international academic conferences, and they have earned him awards and fellowships. In his work, he has constantly demonstrated a genuine intellectual independence. He is a well respected member of the academic community, and someone we personally enjoyed working with. Alexandrani’s arrest is a repression of free speech and should be condemned. We hope that he will be released promptly and return to his friends and to the research community.

    First signatures
    Francois Burgat, Research Director, CNRS (Centre National pour la Recherche Scientifique). Vincent Geisser, Research Director, CNRS. Alain Gresh, Le Monde Diplomatique. Miriam Catusse, Director of Contemporary Studies, IFPO (Institut Français du Proche–Orient). Claire Beaugrand, Researcher, IFPO. Nicolas Dot-Pouillard, Researcher, IFPO. Laurent Bonnefoy, Researcher, CERI/Sciences Po. Matthieu Rey, Researcher, College de France. Stéphane Lacroix, Associate Professor, Sciences Po. Mounia Bennani-Chraïbi, Professor, Lausanne University.
    Ellen Lust, Professsor, Yale and Gottenberg. Gibert Achcar, SOAS. John Chalcraft, LSE. Asef Bayat, University of Illinois
    Khaled Fahmy Professor, AUC. Rabab al Mahdi, Professor, AUC.

    http://freealexandrani.wesign.it/ar

  • Morocco’s King Slow to Deliver on Pro-Democracy Vows
    http://www.nytimes.com/2014/06/12/world/africa/moroccos-king-slow-to-deliver-on-pro-democracy-vows.html?_r=1
    Mounia Bennani-Chraïbi, a professor of international studies at the Institute of Poltical and International Studies at the University of Lausanne in Switzerland, who has researched Moroccan democracy movements, said, “The regime goes after opposition figures for common crimes, or terrorism in the case of Anouzla, to remove their political opponent status and to prevent them from becoming heroes.”

    “Morocco is one of those regimes that are in a gray zone — not completely authoritarian nor democratic — where repression is done selectively and punctually,” Ms. Bennani-Chraïbi added. “As the movement was strong and the regime was uncertain, security forces were walking on eggshells because they knew that massive repression is what lights the fire and would amplify the movement.”

    #Morocco #Democracy #HumanRights