Morocco Defamation Laws: Civil, Criminal & Defences

In Morocco, defamation is treated as both a civil wrong and, in defined situations, a criminal offence. The 2016 Press and Publication Code (Law 88-13) removed prison sentences for ordinary press defamation and replaced them with fines, but the Penal Code (Code penal) still keeps custodial penalties for certain insult offences, including insulting state institutions, magistrates, and the King.
Is defamation civil, criminal, or both in Morocco?
It is both, and which regime applies depends on who speaks and what is said. Since 2016, Morocco's main framework for press and published expression is the Press and Publication Code (Law 88-13), which decriminalised ordinary press defamation by replacing imprisonment with fines. Under that Code, defamation (diffamation) is an allegation or imputation of a fact that harms the honour or consideration of a person or body. Separately, the Penal Code (Code penal), amended in 2016 by Law 73-15, keeps several insult and contempt offences that still carry prison, particularly where the target is a public official, a state institution, the judiciary, or the monarchy. A person harmed by a false statement may also pursue civil compensation under the general civil-liability rules of the Dahir of Obligations and Contracts (DOC), which require fault, harm, and a causal link.
What counts as defamation under the Press Code?
The Press and Publication Code distinguishes defamation from insult. Defamation is the public allegation or imputation of a specific fact that damages a person's honour or reputation, while insult (injure) is an offensive expression or contemptuous term that imputes no precise fact. Article 85 addresses defamation of private individuals, and Article 84 addresses defamation of courts, the armed forces, public bodies, and public officials acting in office. The Code applies to newspapers, periodicals, and, through the electronic press provisions, to online news outlets. Because Law 88-13 sets fines rather than prison for these press offences, a journalist or publisher who defames a private person faces a financial penalty and civil liability rather than incarceration, a significant change from the pre-2016 regime.

Watch out: The Press Code covers expression published through the press. Speech outside that framework, such as a direct insult of an official or of a state body, can still be prosecuted under the Penal Code, where prison remains available.
What criminal penalties remain in the Penal Code?
Several Penal Code offences continue to carry imprisonment. Article 263 punishes insulting a public official, magistrate, or law-enforcement agent in the exercise of their functions with one month to one year and a fine. Article 265 applies similar penalties to insulting public institutions, and Article 266 punishes acts intended to discredit judicial decisions in a way that undermines judicial authority, also with one month to one year. Offences touching the monarchy are treated more severely: Article 179 punishes offending the person of the King, the royal family, or the heir apparent with six months to two years and a fine of 20,000 to 200,000 dirhams. These are distinct from ordinary defamation and are categorised by Moroccan law as offences against state institutions or persons, not as private reputation claims.
| Provision | Conduct | Penalty |
|---|---|---|
| Press Code Art. 85 | Defaming a private person | Fine (no prison) |
| Press Code Art. 84 | Defaming public institutions or agents | Fine, roughly 100,000 to 200,000 dirhams |
| Penal Code Art. 263 | Insulting a public official in office | 1 month to 1 year and fine |
| Penal Code Art. 266 | Discrediting court decisions | 1 month to 1 year and fine |
| Penal Code Art. 179 | Offending the King or royal family | 6 months to 2 years and fine |
How does civil liability work?
Civil liability for a false and damaging statement is grounded in the general tort rules of the Dahir of Obligations and Contracts. Under those rules a person who causes harm to another through fault must repair it, so a defamatory statement that injures reputation can support a claim for damages where the claimant proves a wrongful act, actual harm, and causation. A claimant may seek monetary compensation and, in appropriate cases, corrective measures such as publication of the judgment. Civil claims can run alongside a press-offence prosecution, and a person harmed by defamatory press content commonly pursues both the statutory press remedy and ordinary civil damages. Moroccan civil courts assess damages by reference to the seriousness of the imputation, its reach, and the harm shown, rather than by a fixed statutory tariff.
What defences and privileges apply?
Moroccan law recognises defences familiar from civil-law systems. Proof of truth (exception de verite) generally defeats a defamation charge where the matter concerns public conduct rather than private life, and good faith, meaning an honest belief in the truth of the statement pursued for a legitimate purpose without malice, is a recognised defence in press cases. Fair reporting of public proceedings and reproduction of official acts are protected. The Press Code also gives a person named in a publication a statutory right of reply, allowing a correction to be published, which can mitigate harm before litigation. Courts weigh freedom of the press, protected by the 2011 Constitution, against the protection of honour and private life, and they distinguish criticism of public conduct, which receives latitude, from gratuitous attacks on private individuals.

Watch out: The truth defence is narrower for statements about a person's private life. A claim that a matter is true does not automatically excuse publishing private facts that have no bearing on public conduct.
What is the limitation period?
Press offences under the Press and Publication Code are subject to short limitation periods typical of press legislation, so a complaint over a defamatory publication must be brought promptly after publication rather than years later. Claimants who wait risk having a press-offence prosecution declared time-barred. For ordinary civil claims under the Dahir of Obligations and Contracts, the longer general limitation rules for tort actions apply, which give a claimant more time to seek damages than the press-offence window allows. Because the two regimes carry different deadlines, a person harmed by a publication is well advised to act quickly to preserve the press remedy and not rely solely on the longer civil period.
How is online defamation treated?
Morocco brought online and electronic publications within the Press and Publication Code, which contains provisions on the electronic press (presse electronique). News websites and registered electronic publications are therefore subject to the same defamation and insult rules, and the same fine-based penalties, as print media. A defamatory article on a registered news site is handled like a defamatory print article, while statements on social media by ordinary users can fall under either the Press Code or, depending on the content, the Penal Code, particularly where the speech targets officials, institutions, or the monarchy. A person harmed online can seek the statutory right of reply or correction, civil damages, and, where a Penal Code offence is alleged, a criminal complaint.
How do you bring a defamation claim in Morocco?
There are parallel routes. A person targeted by a defamatory publication can file a complaint so that the public prosecutor pursues the press offence before the criminal court, which can impose the statutory fine, or can pursue a Penal Code insult offence where prison is available. Separately, the claimant can bring a civil action for damages under the Dahir of Obligations and Contracts before the civil courts, seeking compensation and corrective measures. Many claimants combine a demand for a published right of reply with a civil claim. Because the press and Penal Code regimes carry different penalties and deadlines, the correct route depends on the nature of the statement and the target. This is general information about Moroccan law, not legal advice for any specific dispute.

Frequently Asked Questions
Is defamation a crime in Morocco?
It can be. Since the 2016 Press and Publication Code (Law 88-13), ordinary press defamation is punished by fines rather than prison. But the Penal Code still criminalises certain insult offences with imprisonment, such as insulting public officials (Article 263), state institutions (Article 265), or offending the King and royal family (Article 179).
Did Morocco abolish prison for defamation?
Only partly. Law 88-13 of 2016 removed prison for press defamation and replaced it with fines. However, several Penal Code provisions retained custodial penalties for insulting officials, courts, and the monarchy, so prison remains possible for those specific offences outside the press framework.
What are the penalties for defamation in Morocco?
Under the Press Code, defaming a private person (Article 85) and defaming public institutions or agents (Article 84) carry fines, with Article 84 fines reaching roughly 100,000 to 200,000 dirhams. Penal Code insult offences such as Articles 263 and 266 carry one month to one year, and Article 179 carries six months to two years.
Can you sue for defamation in Morocco?
Yes. Beyond the press and Penal Code routes, a person harmed by a false statement can bring a civil claim for damages under the Dahir of Obligations and Contracts, which requires proof of fault, harm, and causation. Courts assess damages by the seriousness and reach of the statement.
Is truth a defence to defamation in Morocco?
Generally yes for matters of public conduct, where proof of truth (exception de verite) can defeat a defamation charge, and good-faith reporting is protected. The defence is narrower for statements about a person's private life that have no bearing on public conduct.
How is online defamation handled in Morocco?
The Press and Publication Code includes electronic-press provisions, so registered news websites face the same fine-based defamation rules as print. Social-media statements may fall under the Press Code or the Penal Code depending on content, especially where officials, institutions, or the monarchy are targeted.
Are insults to the King treated as defamation?
No, they are treated as a separate Penal Code offence. Article 179 punishes offending the King, the royal family, or the heir apparent with six months to two years and a fine, which is distinct from ordinary defamation of a private person or institution.
What is the time limit for a defamation claim in Morocco?
Press offences carry short limitation periods, so a press-defamation complaint must be filed promptly after publication. Ordinary civil claims under the Dahir of Obligations and Contracts follow the longer general tort limitation rules, giving more time to seek damages.
Sources and References
- Human Rights Watch, The Red Lines Stay Red: Morocco's Reforms of its Speech Laws (Law 88-13 and Penal Code articles)(hrw.org)
- Committee to Protect Journalists, Morocco's new press law undermined by draft penal code(cpj.org)
- Freedom House, Morocco: Freedom on the Net 2024 (Press Code and Penal Code speech offences)(freedomhouse.org)
- Reporters Without Borders, criminal defamation charges in Morocco(rsf.org)
- Euro-Med Monitor, freedom of opinion and expression in Morocco(euromedmonitor.org)
- SMEX, Morocco: Legal Restrictions on the Freedom of Expression (Press Code articles)(smex.org)