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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Slain Danish student’s mother urges death sentences in Morocco trial

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Salé: The mother of a Danish student beheaded along with another Scandinavian woman while hiking in Morocco’s High Atlas mountains called on Thursday for the suspected killers to face the death penalty as their trial neared its end.


“The most just thing would be to give these beasts the death penalty they deserve, I ask that of you,” said Helle Petersen in a letter read by her lawyer in an anti-terrorist court in Sale, near the capital Rabat.


“My life was destroyed the moment that two policemen came to my door on December 17 to announce my daughter’s death,” the mother of 24-year-old Louisa Vesterager Jespersen wrote in the letter, read out in total silence and with the defendants’ faces impassive.


Journalists flocked to the court where the trial of the 24 suspects reopened for what could be its last day, in a case that has shocked the North African country.


Prosecutors have already called for the death penalty for the three main suspects behind the “bloodthirsty” murder of the young Scandinavians in December.


The maximum sentence was sought for 25-year-old suspected ringleader Abdessamad Ejjoud and two radicalised Moroccans, although the country has had a de facto freeze on executions since 1993.


Petitions on social media have likewise called for their execution. The three admitted to killing Jespersen and 28-year-old Norwegian Maren Ueland, whose family has declined to take part in the trial.


The prosecution has called for jail terms of between 15 years and life for the 21 other defendants on trial since May 2.


The life sentence has been sought for Abderrahim Khayali, a 33-year-old plumber, who had accompanied the three alleged assailants but left the scene before the murders.


The prosecution called for 20 years in jail for Kevin Zoller Guervos, a Spanish-Swiss convert to Islam.


The only non-Moroccan in the group, Guervos is accused of having taught the main suspects how to use an encrypted messaging service and to use weapons.


His lawyer, Saskia Ditisheim, said Guervos’ “most basic rights had been trampled” in a letter to the Swiss foreign ministry, regretting that he had not had “consular protection”.


All but three of those on trial had said they were supporters of the IS group, according to the prosecution, although IS itself has never claimed responsibility for the murders.


The three killers of the women were “bloodthirsty monsters”, the prosecution said, pointing out that an autopsy report had found 23 injuries on Jespersen’s decapitated body and seven on that of Ueland. — AFP


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