country:morocco

  • France and Morocco strengthen counterterrorism cooperation

    – AP | Paris Friday, 29 May 2015

    France and Morocco have vowed to strengthen counterterrorism cooperation, four months after they resumed judicial cooperation following a year-long diplomatic rift.
    After meeting with French president Francois Hollande on Friday, Moroccan Prime Minister Abdelilah Benkilane said : “We had a difficult year of course, now it’s behind us, and (relations) are resuming as if nothing had happened.”
    French authorities say counterterrorism and the fight against radicalization were at the top of the agenda for the meeting.
    Both countries are deeply concerned by the large numbers of citizens leaving to fight with the ISIS.
    Morocco suspended judicial cooperation in February 2014 after French police attempted to arrest the visiting head of Moroccan intelligence. Cooperation resumed in January.

  • The Wall of Europe

    In northern Morocco there are two coastal cities cut-off from the rest of the African continent. #Melilla and #Ceuta are autonomous Spanish ports—European exclaves—and for scores of African migrants they represent a gateway to Europe. Migrants routinely attempt to scale the walls that surround each city, but the dangerous climb is just one of many obstacles they must pass if they are to be successful. Death and injury are common in this scramble to reach Europe by any means necessary.


    http://www.catchlight.io/stories/the-wall-of-europe
    #mur #barrière_frontalière #migration #asile #réfugiés #Maroc #Espagne #Gourougou #photographie #Sergi_Cámara
    cc @albertocampiphoto

  • Migrants in Tunisia: Detained and Deported

    In the past few months, we witnessed the attempt to strengthen the project of European borders’ externalization. The new externalization plan would include:
    • policies for controlling and intercepting migrants directed to Europe—as part of the Karthoum process established on November 28, 2014 but already announced by the Mediterranean Task Force in November 2013;
    • asylum policies, according to what the Italian Ministry of the Interior Angelino Alfano proposed during the EU Justice and Home Affairs Council of March 12, 2015. Tunisia, together with Egypt, Morocco, Niger, and Sudan is presented as one of the “laboratories” where the first projects of asylum externalizations would be implemented, with the opening of “reception” centers sponsored by the European Union. The European Union will also ask Tunisia and Egypt to engage in search and rescue operations.

    Should this plan be implemented, migrant boats coming from Libya would be intercepted by the Tunisian Garde Nationale, migrants would be disembarked in Tunisia, and Tunisian authorities would proceed to processing asylum claims and managing status refugees, with the support of IOM and UNHCR. This is the goal that the European Union already tried to achieve in March 2014, when it signed a Mobility Partnership with Tunisia, which has not been implemented yet.

    http://www.storiemigranti.org/spip.php?article1080

    #Tunisie #déportation #renvoi #expulsion #Algérie #migration #asile #réfugiés

  • Invisible Atheists: The Spread of Disbelief in the Arab World | The New Republic
    http://www.newrepublic.com/article/121559/rise-arab-atheists

    LAST DECEMBER, DAR AL IFTA, a venerable Cairo-based institution charged with issuing Islamic edicts, cited an obscure poll according to which the exact number of Egyptian atheists was 866. The poll provided equally precise counts of atheists in other Arab countries: 325 in Morocco, 320 in Tunisia, 242 in Iraq, 178 in Saudi Arabia, 170 in Jordan, 70 in Sudan, 56 in Syria, 34 in Libya, and 32 in Yemen. In total, exactly 2,293 nonbelievers in a population of 300 million.

    Many commentators ridiculed these numbers. The Guardian asked Rabab Kamal, an Egyptian secularist activist, if she believed the 866 figure was accurate. “I could count more than that number of atheists at Al Azhar University alone,” she replied sarcastically, referring to the Cairo-based academic institution that has been a center of Sunni Islamic learning for almost 1,000 years. Brian Whitaker, a veteran Middle East correspondent and the author of Arabs Without God, wrote, “One possible clue is that the figure for Jordan (170) roughly corresponds to the membership of a Jordanian atheist group on Facebook. So it’s possible that the researchers were simply trying to identify atheists from various countries who are active in social media.”

    Even by that standard, Dar Al Ifta’s figures are rather low.

    #paslu #religion #athéisme #plo

    • L’article du 10 décembre 2014

      Survey claims 866 atheists in Egypt, highest in Arab World | Mada Masr
      http://www.madamasr.com/news/survey-claims-866-atheists-egypt-highest-arab-world

      According to press statements by religious authorities on Wednesday, Egypt has the highest number of atheists in the Arab World, amounting to 866.

      This contentious figure was cited by Ibrahim Negm, advisor to Egypt’s Grand Mufti, based on an international survey, conducted by independent polling and survey group “Red C” in 2014.

      Negm added that the country has witnessed a marked increase in atheism over the past four years, with a number of Egypt-based groups appearing online, including, “Atheists Without Borders,” “The Atheist Brotherhood,” and “Atheists Against Religions.

      L’original (?) arabe semble être ceci :

      إلحاد وتطرف متوازيان في مصر !
      http://elaphjournal.com/Web/News/2014/12/966377.html

      ملحد وأفتخر

      وأوضح نجم أن عددًا من الدراسات والإحصاءات أظهر أن الإلحاد في السنوات الأربع الماضية شهد نشاطًا كبيرًا، فسرعان ما ظهرت عشرات المواقع الإلكترونية على الإنترنت تدعو للإلحاد، وتدافع عن الملحدين، في مقدمة هذه المواقع الإلكترونية “الملحدين المصريين” و"ملحدون بلا حدود" و"جماعة الإخوان الملحدين" و"مجموعة اللادينيين" و"ملحدون ضد الأديان". كما ظهرت مواقع شخصية للملحدين، جميعها بأسماء مستعارة فظهر “ملحد وأفتخر” و"ملحد مصري"، و"أنا ملحد".

      ووفقًا لدراسة أعدها مركز “ريد سي” التابع لمعهد غلوبال، فإن مصر تحتل المركز الأول بين الدول العربية في الإلحاد، وتضم 866 ملحدًا، ورغم أن الرقم ليس كبيرًا إلا أنه الأعلى فى الدول العربية. ليبيا ليس بها سوى 34 ملحدًا، أما السودان ففيها 70 ملحدًا فقط، واليمن فيها 32 ملحدًا، وفي تونس 320 ملحدًا وفى سوريا 56 ملحدًا، وفي العراق 242 ملحدًا، وفي السعودية 178 ملحدًا وفي الأردن 170 ملحدًا وفي المغرب 325 ملحدًا. بينما تقدر دراسة أجرتها جامعة ’’إيسترن ميتشيجان’’ الأميركية عدد الملحدين في مصر بمليوني شخص.

      Le nom de l’Institut (Global Center Institute ?) est déjà un poème à lui tout seul : Red Sea transcrit en arabe (ريد سي), ce qui dans l’article anglais donne Red C

      Sinon, les deux articles en anglais disent bien poll ou survey la méthodo du sondage permet donc des estimations d’effectifs aussi petits à l’unité près. Chapeau !

      Ça mérite quand même le #selon_une_étude_récente !

  • Street art: The street artist blu did a amazing politic wall in morocco against Europe. : #street-art pictures - Live! by FatCap

    http://www.fatcap.com/live/blu-in-morocco.html

    Another highly political wall by Blu for his first visit to Africa. The Italian artist came to Morocco, in the city of Melilla, one of the spanish territory in Africa soil. Shocked by the barricades and giant walls imposing Europe’s borders in Africa, the artist has created a wall representing African people around a representation of the european flag where the stars are replaced by barbed wire...

    #art_de_rue #art #peinture_murale

  • Newly released documents show a darker side of Ben-Gurion -
    The minutes of a 1962 discussion about education reveals another facet of the racism of Israel’s first prime minister vis-a-vis immigrants from the Arab states.
    By Gidi Weitz | Apr. 24, 2015 | Haaretz
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/features/.premium-1.653134

    Here’s an intriguing historical fact: Israel’s first prime minister, David Ben-Gurion, wanted to prepare a future leadership of people of Mizrahi origin – that is, of North African or Middle Eastern descent. His idea was to cultivate a group of Mizrahi leaders that would govern the country beginning from the end of the 1970s.

    Unfortunately, he came up with this idea for the wrong reasons.

    In July 1962, a few officials met in the Prime Minister’s Office in Jerusalem to discuss matters relating to the Teachers Federation. Quickly, though, the seemingly bland topic generated a stormy argument about Mizrahim (then known as the “Oriental communities”) and Ashkenazim. The question that split the participants was whether children should be educated within a common, uniform school framework, or whether a differential education system should be introduced at different levels. “We have come to the most vital question,” Ben-Gurion stated. To which the head of the Teachers Federation, Shalom Levin (afterward a Labor Alignment MK), responded, “It’s true that this is the most critical question of all,” and proceeded to explain why he preferred uniform education without making distinctions between children.

    “We believe,” said Levin, “that if the children are divided according to their levels of intelligence, communication between the Oriental communities and the children of European origin will cease altogether.”

    According to the minutes of the meeting, which are preserved in the Labor Party archives, Levin told the participants about a physician from Iraq named Dr. Sasson, who was employed by the Clalit HMO.

    “He met me in a furious state and told me that his daughter’s class was divided into two groups of advanced and regular studies,” Levin related. “He thinks his daughter was placed in the regular-studies group because she is of Iraqi origin. This experiment failed in Tel Aviv, but I saw for myself how badly it wounded Dr. Sasson’s heart.”

    Ben-Gurion, who was vehemently opposed to Levin’s philosophy, also cited a rationale relating to skin color. “The danger we face is that the great majority of those children whose parents did not receive an education for generations, will descend to the level of Arab children,” the father of the nation said, revealing his real opinion of both the Oriental and Arab communities.

    He added, “In another 10-15 years they will be the nation, and we will become a Levantine nation, [unless] with a deliberate effort we raise them to [the level of] the customs you follow, as you, became used to them only among European Jewry, at a time when the Jewish nation was European. But it is not. If we [wanted to] make a joint effort to elevate talented people from those communities to [the level of] an elite who will possess values and will be able to manage the nation as we wish it to be managed – that would be impossible according to your interpretation…

    “The problem is what the character of the Oriental communities will be. They will be the majority of the nation, they have six-to-eight children and the Ashkenazim only two children… The question is whether they will lower the nation or [whether] we will succeed by artificial means and with great efforts to elevate them.”

    Ben-Gurion advocated the establishment of an institution that would cultivate the talented members of the Oriental communities, so that they would be able to take over the country’s leadership within less than a generation. “There are differences among them, too,” Ben-Gurion noted, and went on to heap praise on a Moroccan-born Tiberias teenager named Shimon Shetreet, who had won the Bible Quiz for Youth three years earlier, at the age of 13.

    “He is first in Bible,” Ben-Gurion observed. “Not only he is a smart lad – his mother is sharp and his father is a splendid Jew… If we make efforts so that children of a family like this will receive a more excellent education… we will succeed… Not all of them, not the average, [because] an average nation will mean an Arab average – that is the way they were across the generations… In my opinion, this is the nation’s central concern at this time, this will determine the nation’s character.

    “In another 15-20 years they will be the majority,” the prime minister continued. “They will not vote for people of European origin. We’re done with this business of European descent. If we do not make special efforts, the Iraqi father, too, will be angry because his son isn’t among those sent for advanced studies; we need to know that the talented children will receive more intensive education… [The nation] will not be elevated just by knowing Hebrew. All the Arabs can speak Hebrew, the way of speech itself already makes no different, all the children will speak Hebrew, that is not the worry.

    “The question is what kind of Jews they will be. Will they be the Jews we want them to be, or will they be like the Jews of Morocco the way they were? The elite of the Oriental communities should be accorded education, and a special effort needs to be made to that end. If you are talking about average uniform education, then woe betide us. The law of the average will pull and elevate the few Ashkenazim upward. Is that what we want?”

    Levin did not flinch. “It will not succeed,” he stated, “if the main effort is not aimed at their preschoolers… at the children of those communities… The preschool has to take the place of the home, the role that the home plays for Ashkenazi children.”

    “Preschool alone will not elevate them,” Ben-Gurion responded. “They have to go to high school and university.” “

    “Of course, but together with Ashkenazim,” Levin said.

    “Don’t worry about the Ashkenazim,” Ben-Gurion said, adding, “How many Ashkenazim will you have in 20 years? Very few… We have to make an effort so that the future of the nation will be as though Europe [its Jewish population] was not annihilated… What will the country be like if it becomes Levantine? Will American Jewry take pride in us?”

    Ben-Gurion’s prophecy did not come true: The Mizrahim do not constitute an overwhelming majority of Israel’s population. Individuals of European descent and their heirs have continued to hold the reins of government. The prejudices, however, are still with us. On the other hand, Shimon Shetreet, the kid from Tiberias whose singularity Ben-Gurion gloried in as compared to his inferior compatriots, became a professor of law, a Labor Party MK and a cabinet minister in the government of Yitzhak Rabin.

    In 1980, three years after the members of the Oriental communities ousted Labor from power for the first time, and a year before the violent election campaign in which an anti-Mizrahi speech by the entertainer Dudu Topaz played a starring role, an internal forum of the Labor Party met to discuss the party’s alienation from the Mizrahim.

    Shetreet told his fellow members at that time: “The negative image, which stuck with no justification to the communities that immigrated from the countries of the East, was in large measure created by the dominant group. Anyone who thinks that it started in the 1950s is wrong. I invite you to [examine] the historical files from the beginning of the century, to see the list of wages, which ranked the workers in the following order: Hebrew worker, Yemenite [Jewish] worker, Arab worker… Society here talks about people who are ‘Moroccan but nice,’ or someone who ‘was born in Iraq, but never mind.’”

    “‘Never mind’ is also said about the Yekkes [German-speaking Jews],” someone interjected. Shimon Peres, Ben-Gurion’s disciple, quipped, “Does anyone want the floor in the name of the Yekkes?”

    “People adopt the public image that others hold of them,” Shetreet continued. “When they’re asked where they were born, they reply apologetically, ‘I was born in Morocco.’ So what?”

    Thirty-five years later, along came artist Yair Garbuz and his remark during last month’s election campaign about how “amulet-kissers, idol-worshipers and people who prostrate themselves at the graves of saints” are controlling Israel.

  • Bavures and shibboleths: the changing ecology of culture and language in Morocco
    https://marforioromano.wordpress.com/bavures-and-shibboleths-the-changing-ecology-of-culture-an

    French is, and has remained until today, the language of power, the language of success. Some see this as accidental. Others, like Mohamed Chafik, as something much more fundamental to the architecture of independent Morocco, and as the guiding principle of a deliberately divisive education system: “One is tempted to believe,” he writes, “that [the political architects of Moroccan education] wanted, as in Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, to create an impoverished Beta class for the masses, and a privileged Alpha class for them and their children.” One doesn’t need to attribute quite such deliberate malice to the framers of Moroccan education policy, but it is all too visible that the Moroccan élite, by and large, continues to send its children to the archipelago of more than 30 French lycées de mission, education at which provides a vertiginous ladder on the snakes-and-ladders board of life. That the minister of education responsible for the accelerated (and, many feel, botched) arabisation of the public system in the 1980s sent his own children to a French lycée de mission is perhaps not insignificant. One researcher, crunching the graduation statistics for these foreign lycées since Independence, shows that 45% of Moroccan graduates from the lycées de mission since 1956 come from 500 families; 34% from 200 families, 27% from 100 families, 21% from 50 families and 15% from 20 families. They are, in other words, to a large extent a support system, and a filter, for the élite. Their graduates move easily into higher education abroad, and attend recruitment fairs in Paris for management jobs in Casablanca. And they prosper.

    Of course this isn’t the whole story, and like the chain of bavures in the Moroccan press, Morocco’s education and language policies can be seen as accidental outcomes of the colonial past, or can be crafted into a hostile narrative, according to one’s polemical stance. But the fact remains that post-colonial Morocco has been joined at the hip with France in a way that seems increasingly strange – and increasingly anachronistic. The weekly news magazine TelQuelrecently ran a long feature examining some of these questions, called France: un ami qui nous veut du bien? Under the subhead Un bulldozer culturel, its authors examine this interplay of culture, education and the francophone élite. They note some of the basic statistics that need to inform any discussion. French cultural spending in Morocco is amongst its highest anywhere in the world (just as its embassy in Rabat is – amazingly – amongst its largest). Each year, some 1,500 Moroccans of the 20,500 inscribed (2014) in the 39 institutions accredited to the French Ministry of Education pass the French baccalaureate, by-passing their own national qualifications system. Encapsulating the negative view, the article quotes leftist academic Youssef Belal as saying, “The French cultural and academic presence in Morocco is encouraged by the Moroccan state’s power centres, and more generally by the economic élite. This presence perpetuates a neo-colonial situation which profits the French state to such an extent that it makes the most strenuous efforts on political and economic levels [to sustain it].”

    There seem to me to be two levels here of interaction. The first is about the way in which this snug relationship benefits élites in both countries; the other about the way in which it distorts Moroccan society. At the binational élite level, it is all too clear (though not my purpose here to explore): French industry has an inside track, French diplomats and politicians – until recently at least – a fairly clear run. Moroccans of a certain class move easily between the educational systems, and the social structures, of the two countries at the highest level. As Maroc Hebdo once put it, “The Moroccan élite only recruits amongst the graduates of the French grandes écoles,” and while this may be an exaggeration, it is not untrue. There are some 30,000 Moroccan students in France, the largest single national group; the thousand or so who make it into the grandes écoles are the cream of the cream. The Moroccan élite of the post-Independence period is francophone, French-educated, and French-orientated; and it is very much in the interests of France to keep it so. A largely shared culture of business, recreation, education and language maintains the intimacy of the colonial period into the post-colonial. Morocco is a jewel in the crown of la francophonie.

    The second level is more interesting, and echoes my point above about the role of language and culture in making and reinforcing distinctions between Moroccans.The modern élite in Morocco is defined by its French-ness, and by its self-conscious distance from other forms of Moroccan-ness.
    Sylvain Beck reckons that “Franco-Moroccan relations should really be seen as purely Moroccan-Moroccan … the French are just intermediaries in these relations.” By this he means that each Francophile cultural choice made by an actual or aspiring member of the Moroccan élite is a deliberate marker of distinction from those Moroccans who don’t, or can’t, make the same choice themselves. The ‘problem’ of France in Morocco is actually the problem of Moroccan society itself, and its costive class structure. Beck calls this “a social elevator running at two speeds, where francophony and francophily become not just cultural capital, but also weapons of domination between Moroccan citizens.”

    It is very noticeable how easily Moroccans can place each other by listening to spoken French: it is replete with social and educational signals and shibboleths, some obvious to a non-francophone foreigner, others quite obscure. This isn’t intrinsically strange – the same is true of Englishmen listening to each other speaking English, after all: but what is really bizarre about it is that this process of class-judgement is done entirely through the medium of a foreign language. Coded in this way it is a way of doing down the Other – a language whose sophisticated deployment is as much designed to exclude as to communicate. And in doing so it delineates a damaging schizophrenia in Moroccan society.

    […]

    A language gambit that is designed to keep people down by marking them as outsiders is bound to create and sustain resentment.
    By taking on this role French becomes associated dangerously closely with an élite that may itself be coming under social and cultural, if not yet perhaps serious political, pressure.

    #morocco #language #maroc

  • Spain: Two-pronged assault targets rights and freedoms of Spanish citizens, migrants and refugees

    Draconian reforms to two pieces of Spanish legislation are an assault on the rights of its citizens as well as an attempt to formalize abusive practices against migrants and refugees, said Amnesty International ahead of a vote in parliament this afternoon.

    http://www.sos-europe-amnesty.eu/spain-two-pronged-assault-targets-rights-and-freedoms-of-spanish-
    #Espagne #push-back #législation #refoulement #asile #réfugiés #anti-terrorisme #terrorisme

    • Spain: legalising human rights violations?

      Madrid, 27 March 2015 - The Spanish parliament, yesterday evening, adopted a law that allows for immediate returns of irregular migrants at the borders of the Spanish enclaves Ceuta and Melilla in Morocco. JRS Europe and SJM Spain have serious concerns that the law would legalise ’hot returns’ of people in need of protection without providing them with access to the proper procedures. We call upon the European Commission to fully investigate the human rights implications of this law.

      http://jrseurope.org/news_detail?TN=NEWS-20150327080225

    • New Spanish law poses serious threat to right of asylum -

      The approved text states that those who attempt to cross the border of Ceuta and Melilla without authorisation “will be rejected in order to prevent illegal immigration into Spain." Consequently, the concept of “rejection at the border” is codified into law, provided for in an amendment which seeks to legalise summary returns on the borders of Ceuta and Melilla. This concept of rejection at the border does not provide for any of the procedural safeguards laid down in Articles 20 and 22 of the Spanish Immigration Law (i.e. the right to an effective remedy, the right to appeal against administrative acts or the right to a lawyer and interpreter) and can violate the principle of non-refoulement (Article 57.6). Thus, the “rejection at the border” without any guarantees or proceedings poses a serious threat to the right of asylum as it justifies the immediate return of people who come to Ceuta and Melilla without first identifying people in need of international protection and of other vulnerable people. Furthermore, these people are returned to Morocco, a country that does not guarantee respect for their human rights nor access to international protection. This can result in a serious breach of the principle of non-refoulement, which dictates that no state may expel or return a person to a country where their lives and physical integrity would be put at risk.

      http://ecre.org/component/content/article/70-weekly-bulletin-articles/1013-approval-of-new-law-on-public-security-poses-a-serious-threat-to-right-of

    • Marca España: Legalizar lo ilegal

      Régimen especial de Ceuta y Melilla. 1. Los extranjeros que sean detectados en la línea fronteriza de la demarcación territorial de Ceuta o Melilla mientras intentan superar los elementos de contención fronterizos para cruzar irregularmente la frontera podrán ser rechazados a fin de impedir su entrada ilegal en España. 2. En todo caso, el rechazo se realizará respetando la normativa internacional de derechos humanos y de protección internacional de la que España es parte. 3. Las solicitudes de protección internacional se formalizarán en los lugares habilitados al efecto en los pasos fronterizos y se tramitarán conforme a lo establecido en la normativa en materia de protección internacional.»

      http://noalaleymordaza.periodismohumano.com/2015/03/16/marca-espana-legalizar-lo-ilegal

  • Spain-Morocco : border #violence

    Madrid, 24 March 2015 – Together with Servicio Jesuita a Migrantes (SJM), JRS Europe is monitoring events on the Spanish land borders with Morocco very closely. Following interviews with migrants and visits to border posts at the Melilla-Nador border detailed submissions were made to an EU delegation that visited in February. JRS Europe is alarmed by recent border violence and the continued efforts of the Spanish government to legalise #push-backs.


    http://jrseurope.org/news_detail?TN=NEWS-20150324053155
    #Espagne #frontière #Maroc #refoulement #migration #asile #réfugiés

  • Libyan Factions Begin New Round of #UN-Brokered Peace Talks in #Morocco
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/libyan-factions-begin-new-round-un-brokered-peace-talks-morocco

    Fighters from the #Fajr_Libya (Libya Dawn), an alliance of Islamist-backed militias, take position in Bir al-Ghanam, around 50 kilometers (30 miles) from the capital, on March 5, 2015. AFP/Mahmoud Turkia.

    Representatives of #Libya's two rival parliaments on Thursday held UN-brokered talks in Morocco aimed at reaching an agreement on a national unity government and finding someone to head it, officials said. The meeting took place in a “positive and constructive” spirit, UN special envoy Bernardino Leon, who has been trying to bring the two sides together for weeks and who chaired the talks, told a press conference. In the previous rounds of UN-brokered peace talks, Leon was not successful in holding direct face to face negotiation between the main warring (...)

  • Why in 2015 would the New York Times want to recycle Paul Bowles’ racist fantasies of #Morocco?
    http://africasacountry.com/why-in-2015-would-the-new-york-times-want-to-recycle-paul-bowles-ra

    “The temperature was easily 90 degrees as Mohamed wrapped my head with a long blue chech…” begins a recent New York Times travel piece on Morocco by Paris-based journalist Seth.....

    #AFRICA_IS_A_COUNTRY #JOURNALISM

  • #Campements de migrants au #Maroc : Plus de 1000 personnes en cours d’#expulsion

    Hier matin, au lendemain du bilan officiel de l’opération exceptionnelle de régularisation, les autorités marocaines ont rasé les campements de migrants dans la forêt de #Gourougou. Près de 1 200 personnes ont été arrêtées pour être expulsées par avion, selon le Gadem.


    http://www.yabiladi.com/articles/details/33347/campements-migrants-maroc-plus-1000.html
    #jungle #asile #migration #frontière #réfugiés

  • Why #Violence Is Flaring at Europe’s Border Crossings

    The Spanish cities of #Ceuta and #Melilla, which sit not in Spain but on the coast of Morocco, are the only two places where the European Union shares a land border with an African country. As such, these Spanish enclaves have the most heavily guarded borders in the EU to keep out African migrants.


    http://www.opensocietyfoundations.org/voices/why-violence-flaring-europe-s-border-crossings
    #Espagne #Maroc #frontière #Forteresse_Europe

  • Muiznieks urges Spain to withdraw amendment giving legal cover to #push-backs in #Ceuta and #Melilla

    Concluding a visit to Melilla and Madrid, Nils Muižnieks, the Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights, has called on the Spanish authorities to stop the pushbacks to Morocco of migrants entering the cities of Ceuta and Melilla and to reconsider the amendments legalising this practice. According to the Commissioner, these modifications are in clear breach of human rights law.

    “The Spanish authorities should reconsider [the amendments] and ensure that any future legislation fully abides by Spain’s international obligations, which include ensuring full access to an effective asylum procedure, providing protection against refoulement and refraining from collective expulsions", Commissioner Muižniekssaid.

    “Push-backs must stop and should be replaced by a practice which reconciles border control and human rights. This is not mission impossible, considering that the migration flows in Melilla currently remain at a manageable level”, he added. According to the Commissioner, Spain received 5,200 asylum applications in 2014, i.e. 1% of the applications lodged in Europe.

    Furthermore, the Commissioner asked for any excessive use of force by law enforcement officials to be fully and effectively investigated and for those found responsible to be adequately sanctioned.

    Commissioner Muižnieks welcomed the establishment in November 2014 of an asylum office at one of Melilla’s entry points from Morocco. According to the Commissioner, people fleeing Syria are increasingly using this office but regretted that “for other people, particularly Sub-Saharan Africans, who may also have valid protection claims, this possibility is still out of reach and they have to take serious risks, including jumping over the fence that surrounds the city, to get in”.

    Citing the overcrowded conditions in the Centre for Temporary Stay of Migrants (CETI), which is hosting 2,000 migrants, four times its capacity, the Commissioner also recommended improving reception conditions in Melilla.

    The conservative-led lower house of the Spanish parliament approved legislation on Thursday 11 December allowing for the summary expulsion to Morocco of migrants entering the country’s cities of Ceuta and Melilla in North Africa. The bill still has to be passed by the upper house of the Parliament.

    #refoulement #Espagne #Maroc #migration #asile #Forteresse_Europe

  • A line in the sand: Fighting 40 years of exile in the desert of Western Sahara By Nicole Crowder


    A territory about the size of the United Kingdom that stretches out along the Atlantic Ocean between #Morocco and #Mauritania, Western Sahara is technically the last African colony — it never gained its #independence when #Spain decamped in 1975. The territory is divided in half by a 1,600-mile sand wall and surrounded by some 9 million land mines.

    #Western_Sahara is the native land of Sahrawis, or “People of the desert,” in northern #Africa. The Moroccan government has moved some 300,000 settlers into these territories, and this triggered a 16-year war between Rabat (the capital of Morocco) and the Polisario Front Sahrawi independence movement (also called the SPLA, or #Sahrawi People’s Liberation Army). The war, which forced more than 150,000 Sahrawis into exile across the border in Algerian refugee camps, formally ended in 1991, but the #Polisario Front has threatened to resume fighting over the last decade. Next year will mark 40 years of forced exile for the Sahrawis.

    In November 2014 photojournalist Tomaso Clavarino began documenting the Western Sahara military bases and cadets in the SPLA who are fighting for Sahrawi independence in what he describes as one of the “world’s least reported crises.”

    “The Polisario Front is now ready to take up arms again as the international community and the #UN mission #MINURSO [the United Nations Mission for the Referendum in Western Sahara] have been unable to solve the crisis in 40 years,” Clavarino says. “Sahrawis have been in exile since 1975, when it was annexed by Morocco, and since 1991 MINURSO has been working in Western Sahara to organize a ‘negotiated political solution’ for the independence of this region.”


    Clavarino had access to the military bases in Western Sahara, the counterterrorism patrols in the desert, military exercises and parades. He spoke with Polisario Front ministers and army commanders and with activists who fled Morocco and the occupied territories, where there was daily violence against the Sahrawis. Clavarino visited the refugee camps and saw the difficulties of living for 40 years in tents and makeshift houses and relying on humanitarian aid that, with the growth of the terrorist threat in the region in the last three years, has decreased by nearly 70 percent.
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/in-sight/wp/2014/12/10/a-line-in-the-sand-fighting-40-years-of-exile-in-the-desert-of-weste
    #photo #photographie #doc #reportage

  • Can #Morocco face terrorist threats with security arrangements?
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/can-morocco-face-terrorist-threats-security-arrangements

    Moroccan police officers arrive at a detention centre in Sale, near Rabat. AFP/Abdelhak Senna Moroccan police officers arrive at a detention centre in Sale, near Rabat. AFP/Abdelhak Senna

    Moroccan authorities launched a preventive security policy that includes stationing military patrols in large cities to “fight the various threats facing the Kingdom.” The government has indicated that its main concern is the involvement of over 2,000 Moroccans in terrorist groups abroad and the implication of their return to the country. However, will a security campaign, on its own, be able to ward off attacks against the Kingdom?

    Rime El Jadidi

    read (...)

    #Mideast_&_North_Africa #Agadir #Al-Akhawayn_University #Articles #Casablanca #Fès #Hadar #Hadar_campaign #ISIS #Marrakech #Mohammed_Hassad #Mohammed_V_airport #Mohammed_VI #Tangier

  • We and the others | #Nawal_Soufi | TEDxLakeComo

    Social Activist. #Nawal_Sufi is a young cultural mediator. Born in Morocco and living in Catania since the age of six, Nawal, as volunteer , began to deal with people in poverty. Since last spring is in the forefront to help refugees, mostly Syrians, who, by reason of the war, come to Italian shores after dramatic travels. #Nawal has quickly become the reference for the officials of “ Mare Nostrum “, Port Authorities and Institutions, but also for hundreds of refugees that she waits at the station every day helping them not to fall again into the smuggler hands. In late July, was awarded “Woman of the Frontier” at the International Film Festival of Marzamemi. (https://www.facebook.com/pages/Nawal-... )

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=td_DxfO-vwI&feature=share


    #Catane #activisme_social #migration #asile #aide #réfugiés #Sicile #secours #mourir_en_mer #Méditerranée

  • Migrations Asile Maroc - Cette histoire toujours banale mais toujours triste postée par Reece Jones sur Facebook

    https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=720057011410967&set=a.101895756560432.3992.100002200237554&

    On our last stop in Tangiers before the ferry back to Spain, a number of young men rushed to our bus and climbed inside the engine and the wheel wells. Our driver told us later that the x-ray machine at the port spotted 6, but the police could only find 5 of them so they brought in a dog that found 2 more.

    #migrations #asile #maroc #espagne frontières #murs

  • #54_Kingdoms: Apparell ‘with a Pan-Africanist sensibility’
    http://africasacountry.com/54-kingdoms

    As it stands the #African_Cup_of_Nations (AFCON) may not take place as advertised next January in #Morocco anymore (let’s hope it does or only gets delayed to next summer). One thing we know for sure is there will be cool gear. This summer, while watching the World Cup around the city (in 3 of the 5 boroughs), […]

    #FASHION #FOOTBALL_IS_A_COUNTRY #Ghana

  • France and Algeria: United Against Morocco For Now? | Morocco World News

    France and Algeria: United Against Morocco For Now?
    Tuesday 11 November 2014 - 20:59

    Morocco World Newshttp://www.moroccoworldnews.com/2014/11/143839/f

    By Majid Morceli

    San Francisco- No one can beat the French when it comes to doing business for the good of the French people. This is exactly what happened when France Renault inaugurated an automobile assembly line in Algeria today. Usually, Algerian President Bouteflika does not miss this sort of event. Unfortunately for him and due to his known health issues, he was forced to send his Prime Minister to do the honor for him. This new plant will employ 350 people and the sale of these cars will be strictly to Algerians, which means that French will benefit the most.

    This plant will assemble 25,000 vehicles per year, which is very small in comparison to the Tangier plant and its 5,500 employees, set to produce 400,000 vehicles per year for export.

    The Algerians authorities don’t see it that way, though. They see that France is now on their side, and they can charm France by opening up their economy for it to profit even more if only it continues to side with their regime.

    A few months ago, France was considered Algeria’s sworn enemy. Now we see that the Algerians will do anything that would have been considered impossible just few months ago to please the French, so long as it continues the process of dumping Morocco as an old friend and strategic ally.

    For instance, no Algerian ever thought that their country would allow a French Judge, Marc Trevidic, to exhume the monks’ remains at the Tibehirine monastery in order to investigate their murder by the Algerian military. Those days are over. Today, the Algerian regime believes that in order to defeat Morocco, they will have to buy those who support it, and France has been a staunch ally and has supported Morocco more than once.

    Algerians have always been proud to be the only Arab country that would not sell its soul to the West. It is now doing everything possible to cozy up with France, a country that Algeria always reminds us mercilessly killed 1.5 million of its people.

    While turning the page and starting a new beginning with France is good, Algerians have other reasons for their actions. They want to isolate Morocco and force France to withdraw its support for it. The Algerians are willing to forget that France shamed them since independence, as long as it takes them a step further in their master plan to defeat Morocco.

    The Algerians would rather start a new beginning with France than with Morocco. Not long ago, the authorities in Algeria were telling their people that they would never forget the massacre of their martyrs by France, and were accusing Morocco of being a sellout. Who’s the sellout now?

    Algerian leaders have succeeded in fooling their people into thinking that this French plant, which will employ 350 Algerians, is a phenomenal accomplishment, but they will never reveal to their people the whereabouts of the billions that they make selling oil. We know that much of Algeria’s oil revenue is spent on keeping the peace by bribing their own people and buying weapons they think will be forced to use against Morocco

    Let’s see how long this warm relationship will last. As soon as the French finish their charm offensive and get as many profitable businesses in Algeria as they can, you will see them coming back to Morocco..

    Let France be France and do whatever necessary for the good of the French people, and let the Algeria fight Morocco day and night until the end of time.

  • #Hot_returns. When the State acts outside the law. Legal report.

    “Hot returns” is the term coined popularly to the action carried out by the law enforcement authorities and consists of handing the foreign citizens who have been intercepted by those authorities in the area under Spanish sovereignty over to the Moroccan authorities on a de facto basis without carrying out the legally established procedures or meeting the internationally acknowledged guarantees. Images, witnesses and other numerous sources with evidential value accredit such practices in the cities of Ceuta” and Melilla and the small islands under Spanish sovereignty.

    This report is aimed at (I) establishing that “hot returns” breach the immigration legislation (II) and the lack of a legal basis of the Spanish Ministry of the Interior’s attempts to justify the “hot returns” based on the concept of an “operational” border (III), the irregular entry through unauthorised border posts (IV) and the agreement between Spain and Morocco regarding the circulation of people, transit and readmission of foreigners who enter illegally (V). Likewise, this report sets out the reasons why a possible reform of the immigration legislation to provide legal coverage to these types of practices would contravene EU regulations and international human rights law, which would expressly discredit them (VI). This report ends with reflections about the criminal implications for those who order, execute or allow “hot returns”

    http://eprints.ucm.es/27221

    #Ceuta #Melilla #expulsion #refoulement #Maroc #Espagne #migration #frontière #réfugiés #asile #devoluciones_en_caliente

  • The Deportation Mess: A Bureaucratic Muddling of State Fantasies

    In the past four weeks alone, the Minister of Justice and Security in the Netherlands was blamed for deporting failed asylum seekers with severe medical conditions to countries in which their health treatment cannot be guaranteed; the chief of the national police in Melilla, Spain, was charged by a judge for illegally performing ‘pushback’ operations of migrants into Morocco; and the Israeli High Court ordered the dismantling of the biggest detention center and revoked a recent law that permitted the imprisonment of asylum seekers for one year without trial. I could go on providing more examples from other countries that illustrate the formal and informal mess that overwhelmingly characterizes the running of modern state deportation regimes.

    http://bordercriminologies.law.ox.ac.uk/deportation-fantasies

    #renvoi #expulsion #asile #réfugiés #migration #push-back #refoulement #régime_de_départation

  • Comment le Maroc est devenu un lieu incontournable pour les homosexuels occidentaux et la prostitution dans les années 50 - BBC News

    http://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-29566539

    A British man flew home from Marrakech last week after being jailed for “homosexual acts”. There was a time though when Morocco was renowned as a haven for gay Americans and Britons, who fled restrictions in their own countries to take advantage of its relaxed atmosphere.

    For decades Tangier and other Moroccan cities were magnets for gay tourists. Prior to independence in 1956 Tangier was an international zone that was administered by several different European countries, without a very rigid rule of law. In the words of the English academic Andrew Hussey, Tangier was “a utopia of dangerous, unknown pleasures.” The Americans who turned up in the 1950s were escaping from a repressive society where homosexuality was outlawed. In Morocco, attitudes were much more relaxed and, provided they were discreet, Westerners could indulge their desires, without fear of harassment, with a limitless supply of young locals in need of money, and smoke an equally limitless supply of the local cannabis.

    The differential in wealth between foreigners and Moroccans created a thriving market in prostitution, but relations were not only based on the exchange of money. Paul Bowles had a long-lasting friendship with the artist Ahmed Yacoubi, and his wife Jane lived in an apartment upstairs with a wild peasant woman called Cherifa.