Spain says Islamic militants pose serious threat to Moroccan government
By DANIEL WOOLLS Associated Press Writer
MADRID, Spain
Islamic militants pose such a serious threat to Morocco _ home to most of
the suspects in last year's Madrid train bombings _ that the government
there could be in jeopardy, a senior Spanish official warned on Tuesday.

Last summer, Spain's leading anti-terror investigator told lawmakers
investigating the attack that Morocco had up to 100 al-Qaida-linked cells
capable of suicide attacks, posing Europe's biggest terrorist threat.

Most of the 22 suspects jailed in the train bombings are Moroccan. Another
Moroccan, identified as 21-year-old Jaouad el Bouzrouti and described as
having links to the bombing's ringleaders, was arrested Tuesday near his
home in Fuenlabrada, a Madrid suburb.

"I believe that in the fight against Islamic fundamentalism and Islamic
terrorism, the political survival of Morocco and the Moroccan regime are
stake," the senior government official told reporters Tuesday on condition
of anonymity.

The official said the Casablanca suicide bombings in May 2003, which struck
a Spanish social club and other targets and killed 32 bystanders and 13
attackers, "were aimed at the political heart of the Moroccan political
regime."

Morocco's government is among "those most interested in controlling and
eventually defeating Islamic fundamentalism," the official said. "It is a
country that is trying to move towards modernity, to move toward democracy."

The Moroccan government is one of the Muslim world's closest U.S. allies,
and Washington has routinely praised the country for its democratic changes
under King Mohammed VI, who took the throne after the death of his father,
King Hassan II, in 1999.

Moroccan authorities blamed the Casablanca attacks on al-Qaida and launched
a crackdown on fundamentalist suspects, arresting more than 5,000 people.
Most were released, but 700 remain behind bars and a small number face the
death penalty _ unused in Morocco since 1993.

Also Tuesday, a deeply divided panel of Spanish lawmakers probing the Madrid
bombings _ under intense pressure to produce results in time for Friday's
anniversary _ approved preliminary recommendations on how to prevent another
attack. The approval came after five of the panel's 16 members refused to
vote.

The Association of Victims of March 11 _ which repeatedly has complained
that Spanish media treat them like a "spectacle" and that politicians do not
care about them _ appealed to be left alone for private mourning on the
anniversary.

The main act of homage will be a short, silent vigil in a park and the
association will not even be represented at that.

"We implore you to respect our silence," said the association's president,
Pilar Manjon, who lost her 20-year-old son Daniel in the bombing. "We don't
want to be a photo opportunity for anyone." 
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