Through a stand set up at the Salon, the CNDH presents to the public the distinguished Moroccan experience in terms of transitional justice, the most important legislative and constitutional reforms having led to several achievements, and intends to stimulate a debate and provoke reflection between creators, writers , civil society, students and children.
The Council also wishes to celebrate this Moroccan experience on a large scale and to lay the foundations for new practices, on the path of prevention against human rights violations, respect for dignity and the fight against all forms of discrimination.
The CNDH stand promises its visitors a journey to discover a wide range of works on human rights, an interaction with national and foreign experts around themes inspired by memory, history and writings. of women on reparations for damages.
The meetings also focus on the constitutionalization of the recommendations of the Equity and Reconciliation Authority, the international dimension of transitional justice and prevention against torture and scientific research, in addition to testimonies and literary works on the process of transitional justice.
Also discussed are water stress, promotion of cultural diversity, tributaries of national identity and preservation of cultural heritage, as well as youth participation, artificial intelligence and protection of rights humans in the wake of the Al Haouz earthquake.
Like previous editions, the CNDH stand will give a voice to children from the twelve regions to express their visions on issues that concern them closely.
Literary creation is also present through meetings with writers, from here and elsewhere, dealing with contemporary human and socio-political issues such as political violence, racism and genocides.
The public was there to meet the Gabonese writer Charline Effah, the guest of the section “Literature and creation: repairing and building a common future”, who shared her novel “Les Femmes de Bidibidi”, a camp in northern Uganda, where people fleeing the civil war raging in South Sudan live. It is a tribute to all women who suffer domestic violence or war rape and who try to rebuild themselves and reinvent love.