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‘Radical’ young men key suspects in Morocco tourist murders

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One key suspect in the murder of two Scandinavian hikers in Morocco was a plumber and another was a carpenter who enjoyed drinking alcohol before embracing radical Islam, friends and neighbours said.

Abderrahim Khayali, the plumber, was the first to be arrested Monday by Moroccan authorities in the tourist hub of Marrakesh, hours after the bodies of the two women were found in the High Atlas mountains.

On Thursday authorities said they had also taken into custody Younes Ouaziyad, the carpenter, as well as street vendors Rachid Afatti and Abdessamad Ejjoud -- all suspects in a "terrorist act".

The Rabat prosecutor said the four men, aged between 25 and 33, appeared in a video pledging allegiance to the jihadist Islamic State group before the grisly murder.

On Friday Moroccan authorities announced nine new arrests over the killing of Danish student Louisa Veserager Jespersen, 24, and 28-year-old Norwegian Maren Ueland.

One of them was beheaded, according to a source close to the investigation.

The neighbourhood of Al-Azzouzia in the Moroccan city of Marrakesh where two of the suspects in the ...
The neighbourhood of Al-Azzouzia in the Moroccan city of Marrakesh where two of the suspects in the murder of two Scandinavian hikers lived
FADEL SENNA, AFP

Khayali's arrest has shocked friends and relatives in Al-Azzouzia, an impoverished neighbourhood of Marrakesh.

"I cannot believe it," said his aunt Fatima Khayali, 46, wearing a black niqab veil revealing only her eyes.

The 33-year-old suspect "worked as a plumber for a hotel" but resigned because the establishment served alcohol which is proscribed by strict Islamic practice, she said.

Khayali embraced salafism -- a form of radical Islam that has taken root in many impoverished areas of Morocco -- three years ago, she said.

After his conversion to salafism he refused to shake hands with women or have them present when men were around, according to a woman who gave her name as Atika and described herself as Khayali's "childhood friend".

Morocco has long been considered among the most liberal of nations in the Arab world, although Islam is the state religion.

- Social inequalities -

The country, which relies heavily on income from tourism, had been spared jihadist attacks since 2011, when a bomb blast at a cafe in Marrakesh's famed Jamaa El Fna Square killed 17 people, mostly European tourists.

But Morocco is marked by glaring social and economic inequalities, against a backdrop of high unemployment among young people.

Al-Azzouzia's unsightly building projects contrast sharply with the opulent palm-tree dotted avenues and luxury hotels of Marrakesh.

Ouaziyad, the 27-year-old carpenter, also lived in the neighbourhood where unemployed young men can be seen loitering in the streets.

He was an "ordinary man", said greengrocer Abdelaati.

The father of Younes Ouaziyad says he is
The father of Younes Ouaziyad says he is "shattered" that his son is a suspect in the murder of two Scandinavian tourists in Morocco's High Atlas mountains
FADEL SENNA, AFP

Relatives, who declined to be named, said that Ouaziyad became a salafist a little more than a year ago, letting his beard grow and opting to wear the long white qamis tunic that radical Islamists prefer.

"He used to press us to say our (five daily) prayers but before he became a salafist he used to drink alcohol and smoke," said Noureddine, a relative of Ouaziyad who declined to give his full name.

Ouaziyad's father refused to talk to the media about his son's suspected involvement in the murders, saying he was "shattered".

A picture taken on December 21  2018  shows a woman walking in the village of Harbil near Marrakesh ...
A picture taken on December 21, 2018, shows a woman walking in the village of Harbil near Marrakesh, home to two of the four key suspects in the grisly murder of two Scandinavian hikers in Morocco
FADEL SENNA, AFP

The two other suspects, Affati, 33, and 25-year-old Ejjoud, lived in the impoverished village of Harbil some 20 kilometres (12 miles) away from Marrakesh. Both eked out livings as street vendors.

"People feel shame to see their village linked to this crime," said a resident who declined to be named.

Mohammed Masbah, an expert on Islamist groups, said all four suspects had one thing in common: "They are socially marginalised".

Hassan Khayali, a cousin of the first suspect, agreed.

Places like Al-Azzouzia are a "time bomb because of poverty, unemployment, drugs and prostitution", all factors that push disenchanted young men to turn to radical Islam, he said.

One key suspect in the murder of two Scandinavian hikers in Morocco was a plumber and another was a carpenter who enjoyed drinking alcohol before embracing radical Islam, friends and neighbours said.

Abderrahim Khayali, the plumber, was the first to be arrested Monday by Moroccan authorities in the tourist hub of Marrakesh, hours after the bodies of the two women were found in the High Atlas mountains.

On Thursday authorities said they had also taken into custody Younes Ouaziyad, the carpenter, as well as street vendors Rachid Afatti and Abdessamad Ejjoud — all suspects in a “terrorist act”.

The Rabat prosecutor said the four men, aged between 25 and 33, appeared in a video pledging allegiance to the jihadist Islamic State group before the grisly murder.

On Friday Moroccan authorities announced nine new arrests over the killing of Danish student Louisa Veserager Jespersen, 24, and 28-year-old Norwegian Maren Ueland.

One of them was beheaded, according to a source close to the investigation.

The neighbourhood of Al-Azzouzia in the Moroccan city of Marrakesh where two of the suspects in the ...

The neighbourhood of Al-Azzouzia in the Moroccan city of Marrakesh where two of the suspects in the murder of two Scandinavian hikers lived
FADEL SENNA, AFP

Khayali’s arrest has shocked friends and relatives in Al-Azzouzia, an impoverished neighbourhood of Marrakesh.

“I cannot believe it,” said his aunt Fatima Khayali, 46, wearing a black niqab veil revealing only her eyes.

The 33-year-old suspect “worked as a plumber for a hotel” but resigned because the establishment served alcohol which is proscribed by strict Islamic practice, she said.

Khayali embraced salafism — a form of radical Islam that has taken root in many impoverished areas of Morocco — three years ago, she said.

After his conversion to salafism he refused to shake hands with women or have them present when men were around, according to a woman who gave her name as Atika and described herself as Khayali’s “childhood friend”.

Morocco has long been considered among the most liberal of nations in the Arab world, although Islam is the state religion.

– Social inequalities –

The country, which relies heavily on income from tourism, had been spared jihadist attacks since 2011, when a bomb blast at a cafe in Marrakesh’s famed Jamaa El Fna Square killed 17 people, mostly European tourists.

But Morocco is marked by glaring social and economic inequalities, against a backdrop of high unemployment among young people.

Al-Azzouzia’s unsightly building projects contrast sharply with the opulent palm-tree dotted avenues and luxury hotels of Marrakesh.

Ouaziyad, the 27-year-old carpenter, also lived in the neighbourhood where unemployed young men can be seen loitering in the streets.

He was an “ordinary man”, said greengrocer Abdelaati.

The father of Younes Ouaziyad says he is

The father of Younes Ouaziyad says he is “shattered” that his son is a suspect in the murder of two Scandinavian tourists in Morocco's High Atlas mountains
FADEL SENNA, AFP

Relatives, who declined to be named, said that Ouaziyad became a salafist a little more than a year ago, letting his beard grow and opting to wear the long white qamis tunic that radical Islamists prefer.

“He used to press us to say our (five daily) prayers but before he became a salafist he used to drink alcohol and smoke,” said Noureddine, a relative of Ouaziyad who declined to give his full name.

Ouaziyad’s father refused to talk to the media about his son’s suspected involvement in the murders, saying he was “shattered”.

A picture taken on December 21  2018  shows a woman walking in the village of Harbil near Marrakesh ...

A picture taken on December 21, 2018, shows a woman walking in the village of Harbil near Marrakesh, home to two of the four key suspects in the grisly murder of two Scandinavian hikers in Morocco
FADEL SENNA, AFP

The two other suspects, Affati, 33, and 25-year-old Ejjoud, lived in the impoverished village of Harbil some 20 kilometres (12 miles) away from Marrakesh. Both eked out livings as street vendors.

“People feel shame to see their village linked to this crime,” said a resident who declined to be named.

Mohammed Masbah, an expert on Islamist groups, said all four suspects had one thing in common: “They are socially marginalised”.

Hassan Khayali, a cousin of the first suspect, agreed.

Places like Al-Azzouzia are a “time bomb because of poverty, unemployment, drugs and prostitution”, all factors that push disenchanted young men to turn to radical Islam, he said.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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