- Mohamed Rabbae
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Mohamed Rabbae (Berrechid (Morocco), March 8, 1941) is a Dutch politician and activist of Moroccan descent.
Contents
Life
Rabbae fled in 1966 as a student from Morocco to the Netherlands, when activists against the regime of King Hassan II were taken prisoner. In the Netherlands he finished his studies, carried out various activities and was involved in various actions for foreigners' rights, including the so-called 182 Moroccans church after asylum-seekers were threatened to be expelled by the then State Secretary of Justice Bert Haars in the first Cabinet-Van Agt. In 1983 he was director of the Dutch Center Foreigners (NCB).
In 1994, he became an MP for the political party GreenLeft. For the elections of that year he was one of the two top candidates, along with Ina Brouwer. During the campaign, in an interview with NRC Handelsblad, Rabbae expressed understanding for people who wanted the book The Satanic Verses by Salman Rushdie banned. He said that "an attempt to have such a book banned with democratic means is better than following Khomeini and other forces of darkness". His party lost 1 of its 6 seats in those elections.
In 2002, Rabbae left parliament, and for some time he was an alderman in Leiden. On his first working day after a period of several months of absenteeism due to heart surgery, he resigned as an alderman. This was because of errors that had been made in his absence, but for which he took responsibility.[citation needed]
Rabbae is on the executive of several organizations, especially in the field of policies on ethnic minorities. In March 2008, he was co-organizer of a large public meeting on Dam Square in Amsterdam in the framework of the International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination.
On April 7, 2008 Rabbae stated in an interview that there should be an Islamic political party, "a kind of Islamic Christian Democratic Appeal." He said he would be available as an adviser for such a party.[1]
Publication
1993 - In addition to the Amicales now UMMON; The mantle organizations of the Moroccan authorities in the Netherlands
References
- ^ It is time for a Muslim party" Elsevier, April 7, 2008
External links
Categories:- GreenLeft politicians
- Dutch people of Moroccan descent
- Moroccan emigrants to the Netherlands
- Dutch Muslims
- 1941 births
- Living people
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