UN Moroccan singer faces third rape charge

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Moroccan singer Saad Lamjarred will face a charge of rape following a complaint by a woman in southern France, officials say.

On Tuesday he was placed under formal investigation over the alleged incident in a hotel in Saint-Tropez.

The 33-year-old is already on bail over an alleged rape case dating back to 2016 and was arrested in 2010 on suspicion of another assault.

His hit Lmaallem is the most-viewed song by an Arab artist on YouTube.

It has been seen more than 650 million times.

Mr Lamjarred had been placed in police custody on Sunday.

Prosecutors in the south-eastern city of Draguignan, near Saint-Tropez, had told AFP news agency the latest case was "complex" and involved two "radically opposed versions of events".

But it was announced on Tuesday that Mr Lamjarred was now under formal investigation for rape and a magistrate would decide in the evening whether he would continue to be detained.

Mr Lamjarred was first arrested on suspicion of beating and raping a woman in New York in 2010. He fled the US while on bail and has not returned since.

Six years later, he was accused of physically assaulting and raping a young French woman in a hotel in Paris. He was released on bail with an electronic tag in April 2017 awaiting trial.

Shortly before his release, French newspaper Le Parisien reported that a French-Moroccan woman had been physically assaulted by Mr Lamjarred in the Moroccan city of Casablanca two years earlier.

She said she reported the incident to the police but later withdrew the complaint under pressure from her family.

Perhaps surprisingly in the age of #MeToo, previous cases against Mr Lamjarred have done little to damage his reputation among fans.

When the singer was arrested in 2016, the Moroccan king himself intervened to cover the singer's legal fees.

Many of Mr Lamjarred's fans maintain the singer was the victim of a "plot" by neighbouring Algeria, which has strained relations with Morocco.

Moroccan media even showed footage of small protests "in solidarity" with the singer during his detention.

The first song he released one year after the alleged incident - and dedicated to the king - showed just how popular he remained, gaining over 140m views.

The victim of the alleged assault in Paris spoke out in November last year,when she uploaded a video on YouTube (in French), and detailed the abuse she had experienced online.

"My name is Laura Prioul, I'm 21 years old, and it has been one year since I was physically attacked, hit and raped.

"For the past year I've been hiding from the media, hiding from everyone, that everyone's been talking about me."

She recounted details of the alleged assault and described the death threats she received after her identity was revealed online.

"So many people were talking about me, insulting me, and no-one supported me apart from my family and friends."

Mr Lamjarred has denied Laura Prioul's allegation of rape.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-45319394
 
Neither France or Morocco have extradition treaties to the US. It's why Polanski is still in France after all these years.
Polanski is a French national, which is why France will not extradite him. The French also do see kid diddling as a serious offense unless force is involved. France set age of consent after two 11 year olds were raped, but evidence could not prove force. Suggested age of consent was as low as 13. Sadly, they settled on 15. Dumb laws.

Back sort of on topic though. Poland, where Polanski also has citizenship, was going to extradite him if he returned, but that decision was overturned by the courts. Polanski can freely return to Poland without worry about being turned over to US.

In practice, most states will refuse to extradite citizens if the state feels that the citizen will not get a fair trial, be subject to torture, inhumane imprisonment, capital punishment, and so on. The US would not normally extradite someone to Pakistan, for example, while torturing "suspected" Pakistani militants in its possession. Other countries specifically prohibit extraditing nationals for most crimes in their constitutions.
 
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