The official MAP news agency yesterday quoted the Interior Ministry as saying the report's content is "truly scandalous."
Morocco is an important US ally in a volatile region, particularly valuable for its help in the fight against terrorism, making its irate, public reaction to last month's report highly unusual.
The report's contents "went from approximation of information to pure and simple invention, from erroneous appreciation to lies," MAP quoted the ministry as saying. It denounced the sources used to compile the report as "unreliable" and "politically hostile."
The latest report, issued April 13, listed corruption and widespread disregard by security forces for the rule of law as two significant ongoing problems in Morocco.
Interior Minister Mohamed Hassad has met with US. Ambassador Dwight Bush about the report, and "technical working sessions" with embassy officials have been held, the ministry said. Apparently to no avail.
"Morocco wants no more evasive responses, but precise case by case answers," he said.
Morocco is obliged "to explore all possible paths" to uncover the report's errors and "is prepared to go to the end," not excluding taking its case to the "highest authorities in the different national American institutions."
It also said decisions at trials touching on politically sensitive issues like the monarchy, security and Islam as it pertains to political life "appeared predetermined."
While reports of disappearances and torture, widespread in the 1970s and 1980s, have eased, the State Department report noted a 2014 report by the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention citing "sources deemed to be credible" saying that disappearances have continued.
The Interior Ministry, as quoted by MAP, questioned the credibility of a report prepared in Washington and based on reports submitted by "a few individuals with no credibility or a handful of Moroccans known for years for their aversion to the regime.
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