logo
Algeria Temporarily Opens Borders with Morocco to Repatriate Migrants

Algeria Temporarily Opens Borders with Morocco to Repatriate Migrants

Asharq Al-Awsat11-03-2025

Algeria temporarily opened its borders with Morocco on two occasions to repatriate 74 Moroccan migrants who had been detained for attempting to cross into Europe illegally. The move, despite ongoing diplomatic tensions, reflects a limited but continued cooperation between the two North African nations on migration issues.
The Moroccan Association for Assisting Migrants in Difficult Situations announced the repatriations, which took place on February 27 and March 6. A total of 42 and 32 individuals, respectively, were handed over at the 'Zouj Beghal' crossing on the Moroccan side and 'Colonel Lotfi' on the Algerian side.
Many of the migrants had spent months in Algerian detention centers or prisons, while others had completed their sentences but remained held due to unpaid fines.
The association stated that the repatriated individuals came from 20 different Moroccan provinces. It also highlighted a broader issue, reporting that more than 520 Moroccan migrants are currently detained in various locations, including Algeria, Tunisia, and Libya.
It called on Algerian authorities to return the bodies of six deceased Moroccan migrants, including two young women, whose families await their remains for burial.
Algerian government sources confirmed to Asharq Al-Awsat that the repatriations were coordinated with Moroccan consulates in Algiers, Oran, and Tlemcen.
Meanwhile, the Moroccan association urged both governments to strengthen cooperation in expediting deportation procedures and combating human trafficking networks that exploit vulnerable migrants.
The association condemned the networks, many of which operate through social media, luring young Moroccans into dangerous migration attempts. It announced plans to take legal action, in collaboration with families, to expose the traffickers and protect migrants.
The decision to temporarily open the border for repatriations is significant, given the long-standing diplomatic rift between Algeria and Morocco. Relations have been severed since August 2021, when Algeria accused Morocco of hostile actions. The border itself has been closed since 1994 following a terrorist attack in Marrakesh, for which Rabat blamed Algerian intelligence. Tensions further escalated in 2021 when Algeria halted gas exports to Morocco.
At the heart of the dispute remains the Western Sahara issue, with Algeria backing the Polisario Front's independence movement while Morocco says the region is an integral part of its territory.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dutch government collapses as Wilders' far-right party leaves coalition
Dutch government collapses as Wilders' far-right party leaves coalition

Saudi Gazette

time5 days ago

  • Saudi Gazette

Dutch government collapses as Wilders' far-right party leaves coalition

THE HAGUE — The far-right Party for Freedom (PVV) is leaving the Netherlands' government over its policy for asylum-seekers, its leader Geert Wilders said on Tuesday, toppling the governing coalition. 'I signed up for the strictest asylum policy, not for the downfall of the Netherlands,' Wilders told reporters Tuesday morning. 'And our responsibility for this cabinet therefore ends here.' Wilders' decision to withdraw support for the most right-leaning government in Dutch history has plunged the country's politics into chaos. It leaves the government, led by Prime Minister Dick Schoof, with just 51 out of 150 seats in parliament. Opposition leaders have called for immediate elections. Schoof, who has clashed with Wilders over policy, has not yet commented. Polls suggest that, were elections to be held today, the PVV would lose seats but remain the largest party, just ahead of the center-right People's Party for Freedom and Democracy. But that's no guarantee that it would be able to enter a new government. Dutch politics features a constellation of parties, none of which has ever been able to command a majority of Dutch votes. Polls suggest that both center-right and center-left parties would gain from new PVV was the clear winner of a November 2023 election. But a coalition accord struck after months of haggling dictated that, while his party would join the government, he would remain on the sidelines, in has a long history of anti-Islam and anti-immigrant rhetoric, He was convicted of discrimination after insulting Moroccan immigrants at a 2014 campaign rally, and his party calls for 'no Islamic schools, Qu'ran, and mosques.'Wilders last week held a rare, formal press conference to present the government with an ultimatum for hardening the country's asylum policy – despite the fact that the minister for asylum and migration is a member of his own party.'The PVV promised voters the strictest asylum policy ever, aiming to make it the strictest in all of Europe,' Wilders said Tuesday. 'We proposed a plan to close the borders to asylum seekers, to stop them, to send them away. To stop building asylum-seeker centers, to close them.'But the coalition, he said, refused his proposals.'I could do nothing other than say that we are now withdrawing our support for this cabinet.' — CNN

British FM says Morocco's autonomy plan for W. Sahara ‘most credible' solution
British FM says Morocco's autonomy plan for W. Sahara ‘most credible' solution

Arab News

time6 days ago

  • Arab News

British FM says Morocco's autonomy plan for W. Sahara ‘most credible' solution

RABAT: British Foreign Minister David Lammy said on Sunday that Morocco's autonomy plan for the territory of Western Sahara was the 'most credible' solution to the decades-long dispute, reversing London's long-standing position. Western Sahara, a mineral-rich former Spanish colony, is largely controlled by Morocco but has been claimed in its entirety for decades by the pro-independence Polisario Front, which is backed by Algeria. Morocco has been campaigning for broad support for its autonomy plan after obtaining US recognition of Morocco's sovereignty over the disputed territory in 2020, in exchange for the normalization of diplomatic relations with Israel. 'The United Kingdom considers Morocco's autonomy proposal submitted in 2007 as the most credible, viable and pragmatic basis for a lasting resolution of the dispute,' Lammy told reporters in Rabat. Britain previously backed self-determination for the disputed territory, which Morocco claims as an integral part of its kingdom. The United Kingdom considers Morocco's autonomy proposal submitted in 2007 as the most credible, viable and pragmatic basis for a lasting resolution of the dispute UK Foreign Minister David Lammy Moroccan foreign minister Nasser Bourita welcomed the shift, saying the new British position contributed 'greatly to advancing this momentum and promoting the UN path toward a definitive and mutually acceptable solution based on the autonomy initiative.' Rabat's push for support for its autonomy plan has seen success. Spain and Germany now officially back the Moroccan autonomy plan, while France last summer recognized Morocco's sovereignty over the territory. 'This year is a vital window of opportunity to secure a resolution before we reach 50 years of the dispute in November,' said Lammy. The foreign minister also said it encouraged 'relevant parties to engage urgently and positively with the United Nations-led political process.' The United Nations considers Western Sahara a 'non-self-governing territory' and has had a peacekeeping mission there since 1991, whose stated aim is to organize a referendum on the territory's future. But Rabat has repeatedly ruled out any vote where independence is an option, instead proposing an autonomy plan. The ceasefire collapsed in mid-November 2020 after Moroccan troops were deployed to the far south of the territory to remove separatists blocking the only route to Mauritania — a route they claimed was illegal, as it did not exist in 1991. The UN Security Council is calling for negotiations without preconditions, while Morocco insists they focus solely on its autonomy plan. 'The only viable and durable solution will be one that is mutually acceptable to the relevant parties and is arrived at through compromise,' added Lammy. In a joint statement, the United Kingdom noted that its export credit agency, UK Export Finance, may consider supporting projects in the Sahara as part of its commitment to mobilize 5 billion British pounds (approximately 5.9 billion euros) for new economic initiatives in Morocco.

Algeria's Representative to UN Highlights Gaza Doctor's Tragedy of Losing 9 Children
Algeria's Representative to UN Highlights Gaza Doctor's Tragedy of Losing 9 Children

Leaders

time30-05-2025

  • Leaders

Algeria's Representative to UN Highlights Gaza Doctor's Tragedy of Losing 9 Children

Algeria's Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Ammar Bendjama, spoked about Israel's horrific incidents in Gaza before the UN Security Council, according to Algerian media. During his speech, Bendjama highlighted the tragedy of Palestinian doctor Alaa Al-Najjar, who lost nine of her children in an Israeli attack on her home in Gaza. Al-Najjar, a pediatrician at Al Tahrir Clinic in the Nasser Medical Complex, was doing her work and treating patients while Israel bombed her home at the south of the city of Khan Younis in southern Gaza. She was shocked when she found her own children and husband brought into the hospital. Dr Hamdi Al-Najjar, is suffering serious injuries. Her children – the eldest aged 13 and the youngest just six months – were severely burned in the bombing. Currently, her husband, Dr Hamdi Al-Najjar, is suffering serious injuries and still in the intensive care. Al-Najjar's children Seven children were recovered and transferred to Nasser hospital, while two others, including the six-month-old baby, remain trapped beneath the rubble, according to Civil defense teams. Al-Najjar's children Their names are Yahya, Rakan, Ruslan, Jubran, Eve, Revan, Sayden, Luqman and Sidra. Al-Najjar's children Since the beginning of Hamas-Israel War in Gaza in 2023, the Israeli strikes have killed at least 53,500 Palestinians and wounded more than 118,000, according to Gaza's Health Ministry. Al-Najjar's children Related Topics: France May Toughen Stance on Israel Over Gaza Aid Blockage Israel Accepts Witkoff's New Gaza Ceasefire Proposal: Netanyahu Hamas Agrees to US Proposal for Gaza, Israel Rejects Short link : Post Views: 48

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store