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Expelled Christians Remain Separated from Moroccan Foster Kids

ICC Note:

Moroccan courts are on the verge of dismissing the appeal of Village of Hope (VOH) orphanage staff who were expelled from the country on allegations of proselytism. The courts are effectively saying the appellants have no legal standing to appeal on behalf of VOH since VOH was forced to relinquish all control of the orphanage after it was seized by the Moroccan government.

By Lillian Kwon

10/22/2010 Morocco (Christian Post) – Seven months after being kicked out of Morocco, more than a dozen Christian parents have still been unable to see their foster children.

And the chances that they’ll ever be reunited with them seem very slim.

The foster parents, who were raising 33 orphaned or abandoned children at a Moroccan orphanage called Village of Hope, have appealed their expulsion and are awaiting a decision by the Administrative Court of First Instance in Rabat, Morocco.

They claim that the Village of Hope was legally registered and thus mass deportations of its workers violated the protections afforded to associations under the North African country’s administrative law, Roger Kiska, an attorney with the Alliance Defense Fund, explained.

“In essence, the police illegally bypassed the administrative courts in deporting the association’s workers,” he told The Christian Post on Friday.

The Christian workers were expelled from the country over proselytism allegations, though none of them were formally charged. They have denied accusations that they tried to convert the children and said they were in compliance with the country’s laws prohibiting proselytism.

Notably, the Village of Hope had operated with the full knowledge of Moroccan authorities for 10 years. It was registered as an official Christian organization and the government knew the workers were Christian.

..

Kiska said that a second claim was filed in Meknes – a city in northern Morocco – that has made their case more difficult. In that claim (which they were not made aware of), the court appointed a new director of VoH and dismissed all of the deportees.

With that, “the government came back at the end of August in our administrative case and told us we have no standing since we no longer are VoH because of the new director,” the ADF attorney said.

So far, the Christian workers have been denied access to the courts to defend themselves.

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Kiska also pointed out that the Moroccan government is illegally using the assets that belong to VoH workers without compensation.

Human rights advocate Aidan Clay of International Christian Concern said the court decision “reflects badly on the values and basic fairness of the Moroccan justice system and courts, being not only an injustice to the VOH staffers but also callous disregard of the interests of the 33 children who know VOH as their only family.”

“Human rights in Morocco continue to suffer significant setbacks,” commented Clay, ICC’s regional manager for the Middle East.

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