Business Day

Morocco pledges more humane migration policy

- FOREIGN STAFF Sapa-AFP

MOROCCO yesterday announced a new immigratio­n policy, pledging to review cases according to specific criteria, following sharp criticism over its treatment of sub-Saharan migrants.

The announceme­nt comes three days after Morocco’s National Human Rights Council issued a report calling for “a radically new asylum and immigratio­n policy,” to which King Mohamed VI responded by admitting “legitimate concerns”.

Those concerns have been rising during the past few months among the estimated 20,000 sub-Saharans residing in Morocco.

There have been reports of racist violence. In late July, a Congolese university professor living in Tangiers reportedly died after a police officer pushed him from a bus deporting him to the Algerian border, and last month a Senegalese man was stabbed to death at the central bus station in Rabat.

Under the government’s new plan, the interior, foreign and justice ministries will establish procedures in the coming days for reviewing the situation of unregister­ed foreigners “on a case-by-case basis and according to specific criteria”.

The government also pledged to strengthen institutio­nal frameworks for processing requests for asylum, “in line with internatio­nal standards and respectful of the kingdom’s commitment­s to promote and protect human rights”.

It also vowed to continue the fight against human traffickin­g, and called on its European partners in particular “to demonstrat­e a concrete commitment” to supporting the implementa­tion of the new policy.

Morocco is the closest African country to mainland Europe, separated by the Strait of Gibraltar and just 15km from Spain at its narrowest point, making it one of the key smuggling routes for illegal migrants crossing into Europe.

Thousands of illegal African migrants regularly attempt to cross from Morocco

This violence is far from over, as witnessed by the tragedies of recent months, which have been particular­ly violent for migrants

into Spain on makeshift boats each year, making the North African country an ally of the European Union (EU) in tackling the problem.

Before the government’s new policy announceme­nt, the EU representa­tive in Morocco, Rupert Joy, hailed the Moroccan human rights council’s recommenda­tions for “recognisin­g the violations of migrants’ rights, which have worried us for a long time”, and for proposing “a fairer and more efficient” policy.

Several months ago, the humanitari­an aid group Doctors Without Borders raised the alarm over increased violence by the authoritie­s against illegal migrants, and announced it was closing its projects in Morocco in protest.

In a report to be presented to the United Nations Human Rights Council this week, Gadem, a Moroccan nongovernm­ental organisati­on supporting illegal immigrants, charged that successive government­s in the past decade have “pursued the same repressive policies in … ‘managing the flow of migrants’.”

“This violence is far from over, as witnessed by the tragedies of recent months, which have been particular­ly violent for migrants in Morocco.”

Contacted for comment, the head of migration and border control at the interior ministry, Khalid Zerouali, insisted the authoritie­s’ main objective was to “protect citizens”, adding that their border “security strategy is directed against criminal networks” only.

Morocco has, in the past, denied the existence of police abuse of illegal migrants, calling claims by human rights organisati­ons “an attempt to smear the name of the kingdom”.

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