Acting under the firm belief that
democracy and
freedom of expression cannot exist without each other, Mamfakinch do not seek to create good citizens as the state defines them but want to redefine citizenship and reshape the state through the establishment of
democracy. To start this revolution, Mamfakinch attempts to provide the public with information that would otherwise be unavailable. which was later revealed by the U.S Senate report on
CIA black sites to be used for torture, as well as investigations on corruption practices by minister
Moncef Belkhayat and his family member Mehdi Kettani, managing director of the Moroccan branch of the French company
Groupe Bull, or by the Moroccan king's special secretary
Mounir Majidi and other officials. Mamfakinch also investigated the moroccan king's business involvement, revealing cases of massive pollution of the
Moulouya river by the sugar producer
Cosumar (controlled by
King's holding SNI) and interviewing local climate and environmental activists such as Mohammed Benata, who were censored by local media when trying to reveal the ecological disaster of the Moulouya, as well as malpractices by the mining company
Managem in
Imider in the
Atlas Mountains, by investigating managem as well as sponsoring a documentary on managem's activity in Imider. After mamfakinch's revelation on the exact location of the torture facility known as the Temara interrogation center, the
February 20th movement organized a protest on May 15, 2011, that marched to the facility and was bloodily repressed according to Amnesty International. According to reports from Lakome, the torture facility, which is believed to have operated for a decade at least, was dismantled on April 27, 2011, before the beginning of the protests and immediately after the revelations made by mamfakinch and the February 20th movement intention to march towards it. ==Spyware attack==