Sunday, June 7, 2015

VIDEO. Jennifer Lopez referred to a complaint in Morocco … – The Express

The “Booty” Jennifer Lopez may well be a tube, it is not appreciated everywhere. The concert of the Latin diva given the Mawazine festival in Rabat, Morocco, May 29, earned him a court summons. The service, broadcast live on national television 2M, has been widely criticized, including by the Moroccan Communication Minister Mustapha El Khalfi, who deemed “unacceptable” and “contrary to the broadcasting law.”

According to the Moroccan Medias24 website, the singer is the subject of a complaint to have “danced and sang songs of baseness and poor undeniable taste aves suggestive gestures and attitudes detrimental to the decency and morality. Everything in the presence of an audience composed mainly of minors and minors. ” For indecent exposure, Jennifer Lopez could face one month to two years in prison, provided that the complaint is successful.



The Conservatives tighten the screw

Jennifer Lopez is not the only one to have drawn the ire of Morocco. The kingdom, torn between conservatism and opening to the West, is being shaken by a series of controversies on morality. In late May, a vast controversy has hatched after the presentation at Cannes film Much loved Nabil Ayouch. The extracts of the film broadcast on the internet, with suggestive dances and about a sexual nature have led violent attacks against the film crew.

& gt; & gt; Read also Much loved , the film on prostitution that ignites the Morocco

If other voices have defended the director and called for a peaceful discussion, government led by the Islamist Justice and Development Party (PJD) quickly took position by banning the film for “serious contempt for moral values ​​and Moroccan women.”

Earlier this year, another social issue, that of abortion, had already made sparks in Morocco after the broadcast of a report by France 2 on abortion. Given the scale of illegal abortions, King Mohammed VI has itself seized of the matter, stating that abortion would be allowed in “some force majeure”, including rape or severe malformations.

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