2003 Casablanca bombings

2003 Casablanca bombings
Part of the Insurgency in the Maghreb (2002–present)
Commemorative stele at Mohammed V Square
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1.5km
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Casa de España
Jewish Cemetery of Casablanca
Hotel Farah
Jewish Alliance
Positano
Locations of the attacks—points denote suicide bombings
LocationCasablanca, Morocco
Date16 May 2003 (2003-05-16)
21:45 – 22:15 (UTC+1)
TargetMoroccan Jews and European tourists, particularly:
  1. Casa de España
  2. Positano
  3. Jewish Alliance
  4. Hotel Farah
  5. Jewish Cemetery
Attack type
Suicide attack
WeaponsPropane bombs in backpacks
Deaths45 (including 11 attackers)
Injured≈ 100
PerpetratorsSalafia Jihadia
No. of participants
15
DefenderMostafa Tahiri
MotiveIslamic extremism, Antisemitism, Anti-Western sentiment
Accused2,112 indicted
Convicted906 convicted (4 in France)
Verdict13 sentenced to death
LitigationArrest warrants issued for 50 Moroccans and 12 foreign citizens

The 2003 Casablanca bombings, commonly known as May 16 (Arabic: 16 ماي, French: 16 mai), were a series of coordinated suicide bombings on May 16, 2003, in Casablanca, Morocco. Twelve suicide bombers loyal to the Salafia Jihadia organization detonated bombs hidden in backpacks in the Casa de España restaurant, the Hotel Farah, the Jewish Alliance of Casablanca, and sites near the Belgian consulate and an old Jewish cemetery. The attacks, which were later claimed by al-Qaeda, were the deadliest terrorist attacks in Morocco's history, claiming the lives of forty-five people (33 victims and 12 suicide bombers) and injuring at least 100. Despite deliberately targeting Jews, none of the victims were Jews as the attack occurred during Shabbat.

Out of the initial commando of fifteen, three abandoned their plans on the spot and were later arrested. The attacks came in a rise in radical preachers critical of the Moroccan government, which they had viewed as infidels; many of the preachers were veterans of the Soviet-Afghan war.

The interrogation of the surviving suicide bombers led to the terrorist cell's ringleader, Abdelhak Bentassir, who had demanded that members of the cell make an oath of allegiance towards him after following a radical preacher. Bentassir later died in police custody in unclear circumstances. Authorities led a judicial purge of Islamists in the country, with indictments filed against 2,112 extremists leading to 903 convictions and 12 death sentences.

In the immediate aftermath of the attacks, a tough counter-terrorism bill was signed which was compared to the Patriot Act. The attacks shined light on the state of shantytowns in the country, with a government initiative fighting against slums being announced the following year. The slums of Sidi Moumen were fully demolished after a series of attacks in 2007.


2003 Casablanca bombings

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