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Moroccan Court Fines Soccer Fan $1,000 For Calling Club President A 'Donkey' Online

Published Jun 17, 2026
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Summary:
  • A court in Kenitra, Morocco fined a soccer fan 10,000 dirhams (about $1,000) for calling a club president a "donkey" on Facebook.
  • The court ruled the insult was degrading but stopped short of calling it defamation.
  • Under Moroccan law, insults and false claims both count as crimes against a person's dignity, online or off.

Calling someone a donkey sounds harmless. It is the kind of insult you expect to cost nothing. In Morocco, it just cost one soccer fan about $1,000. The case quickly made the rounds online.

The $1,000 Insult

A fan in the city of Kenitra kept posting on Facebook about his club's president. He said the man was running the team into the ground. He used the phrase "towards disaster." He also kept calling him a "donkey." The posts went up over his frustration with the team.

A court decided that crossed a line. It fined him 10,000 dirhams. That works out to roughly $1,000.

The fan was arrested and charged. Then the court told him to pay. All of it came from a few Facebook posts.

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Insult Or A False Claim?

The ruling came from a court of first instance. That is the lowest level of court. It still set a clear line.

Moroccan law splits these cases into two buckets. A false claim is something specific. It can be proven true or false.

An insult is different. It is just a rude label. There is no real claim behind it. The court put "donkey" in that second bucket.

The court said the word was degrading. But it did not rise to the level of defamation. The judge weighed whether the word made a real accusation. It did not. Either way, the rules apply the same. It does not matter if you say it out loud or type it online. Courts there treat online speech the same as public speech.

Speech Has A Price Tag

Some people in Morocco see "donkey" as a harsh insult. Others treat it as pretty mild. The court landed somewhere in between.

Morocco has been adding laws to police online abuse as social media use grows. More people post there every year, and the courts have noticed. A law known as 103.13 fights violence against women. It also toughened penalties for online abuse.

Another rule, Article 447-2 of the penal code, covers false claims that damage a name. It can bring prison time on top of a fine. The rules cover posts on any platform, from Facebook to X. The penalties are meant to protect a person's dignity.

Worth Noting

The lesson here is simple. Online insults can carry real costs. And the bar can be lower than you think.

This case is a reminder for posters everywhere. "It was just a Facebook post" is not much of a defense in Morocco. A short, angry post turned into a real bill. The fan likely did not expect a court date over it.

One word online came with a four-figure bill.

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