Journalist and president of Équipe Média, a media organization documenting human rights violations in occupied Western Sahara.
Moroccan police surrounded the family home, threatened arrest, and expelled Ettanji from Cape Bojador while he was visiting relatives.HuMENA Editorial
Ahmed Ettanji is a Sahrawi journalist who founded Équipe Média to break Morocco's information blockade. He was expelled from Cape Bojador in October 2024 during a family visit, threatened with arrest, and faces systematic restrictions on movement.
Ahmed Ettanji is a Sahrawi journalist and human rights defender working in occupied Western Sahara. He co-founded Équipe Média in 2009, a media organization established to circumvent Morocco's information blockade of the territory. The organization documents human rights violations committed by Moroccan authorities and works to raise international awareness of the situation in Western Sahara. Ettanji serves as president of Équipe Média.
The media environment in Western Sahara is tightly controlled. International journalists face systematic restrictions on access, and local Sahrawi voices are subject to surveillance, harassment, and prosecution. Équipe Média operates in this constrained space, gathering testimony, recording incidents, and publishing material that challenges the official narrative. The organization collaborates with the Sahrawi Association of Victims of Serious Human Rights Violations, co-founded in 2005 by Ettanji's colleague Mohamed Mayara.
On 9 October 2024, Ettanji and Mayara traveled to Cape Bojador, a coastal town in the southern part of occupied Western Sahara, to visit family. Upon arrival at the local checkpoint, Moroccan authorities detained them for approximately one hour before releasing them without explanation. When the two defenders reached the family home, they found it surrounded by Moroccan police, including the Police Commissioner of Cape Bojador, auxiliary forces, and other occupation officials.
The authorities demanded that Ettanji and Mayara leave the house and the town immediately. They threatened arrest if the defenders did not comply. The host family was also intimidated; officials threatened to search their home as punishment for hosting the two men. Facing arrest and unwilling to subject their relatives to further reprisals, Ettanji and Mayara left Cape Bojador and returned to Laayoune, the largest city in the territory.
The expulsion from Cape Bojador is part of a documented pattern of restrictions on Ettanji's freedom of movement and assembly. Moroccan authorities systematically target Sahrawi human rights defenders, subjecting them to surveillance, travel bans, arbitrary detention, and reprisals designed to isolate them from the communities they serve. Defenders who document violations or maintain contact with international organizations face heightened scrutiny. Those who host them or provide logistical support are also threatened, creating a climate in which solidarity itself becomes a risk.
Ettanji's work with Équipe Média places him at the center of this targeting. The organization's documentation activities directly challenge Morocco's control over information flows from the territory. By recording violations and disseminating accounts from Sahrawi victims, Équipe Média undermines the narrative of stability and normalcy that Moroccan authorities seek to project. The expulsion from Cape Bojador illustrates the lengths to which authorities will go to prevent Ettanji from moving freely within his own homeland, even for family visits.
Ettanji continues to lead Équipe Média despite sustained harassment. The restrictions he faces are mirrored in the experiences of other Sahrawi journalists and defenders, many of whom operate under travel bans, face criminal prosecution for their reporting, or endure prolonged detention. The targeting of Ettanji and his colleagues reflects Morocco's broader strategy of suppressing dissent in Western Sahara and preventing independent documentation of conditions in the territory.
This case file was compiled by HuMENA's Morocco research team from primary documentation, public filings, family-supplied legal documents, and confidential partner reporting. Editorial responsibility rests with the HuMENA Editorial Board. Where dates or facts are uncertain, the record errs on the side of the source material and notes uncertainty in the live archive at humena.org.
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