
Is the Israeli unit accused of killing 15 Palestinian paramedics in Morocco for «African Lion» ?
The participation of the Israeli army in the 21st edition of the «African Lion 2025» military exercise in Morocco, alongside the U.S. military and several other partner nations, is generating significant controversy.
Palestinian voices have condemned the involvement, pointing out that some of the Israeli soldiers present in Morocco are accused of having killed 15 paramedics, UN workers, and rescuers in Rafah, southern Gaza, just two months ago. At the time, Israel claimed its forces had targeted «suspicious vehicles» driving without lights. However, this version was challenged by video footage released on April 5, which appeared to contradict the official account.
Francesca Albanese, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian territories, reacted strongly to reports of the Israeli military's participation, particularly if it includes those involved in the March 23 attack in Rafah.
If confirmed, this would mark a new threshold of depravity — and a violation of the international obligation to investigate and prosecute individuals implicated in atrocity crimes. ??I urge Moroccan authorities to uphold the rule of law.
The world is watching. https://t.co/mpsAEFaL34
— Francesca Albanese, UN Special Rapporteur oPt (@FranceskAlbs) May 20, 2025
«If confirmed, this would mark a new threshold of depravity — and a violation of the international obligation to investigate and prosecute individuals implicated in atrocity crimes. I urge Moroccan authorities to uphold the rule of law. The world is watching», she wrote on X (formerly Twitter) on May 20, 2025.
As a reminder, Morocco and Israel signed a military cooperation agreement in November 2021 in Rabat, formalizing defense ties as part of a broader normalization process between the two countries.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Morocco World
2 hours ago
- Morocco World
Macron Applauds Morocco's Leadership in Ocean Conservation at UN Conference
Rabat – At the opening of the 'Africa for the Ocean' summit in Nice, French President Emmanuel Macron expressed admiration for what he described as King Mohammed VI's strong and forward-looking commitment to building a blue economy for Africa. Speaking alongside Princess Lalla Hasnaa, who represented the Moroccan monarch at the event, Macron described the King's message as 'clear' and 'decisive' in guiding the continent toward sustainable ocean development. King Mohammed VI addressed the summit with a message urging African nations to take greater ownership of their seas, which he described as central to the continent's future. Delivered by Princess Lalla Hasnaa, the message welcomed the presence of African leaders at what the monarch called an 'unprecedented summit' focused on Africa's 30,000 kilometers of shared coastline. In his message, the King commended President Emmanuel Macron for his commitment to ocean protection and emphasized the pressing need for Africa to move beyond acknowledging the value of its marine resources to actively safeguarding and developing them. He warned that while the continent's seas hold immense promise, they remain largely untapped and insufficiently protected. At the core of the King's message was a conviction that Africa's oceans, if managed responsibly, could serve as a foundation for long-term prosperity across the continent. The summit, organized ahead of the 2025 UN Ocean Conference, brought together African leaders, policymakers, and international partners to reflect on the continent's ocean potential and the responsibilities that come with it. For Macron, Morocco's place at the helm felt natural. 'Morocco stands out on the continent,' he said, noting the country's efforts in ocean governance, its stance against plastic pollution, and its push for regional cooperation. 'These are not just policies, but signs of a clear vision,' he added. Macron reserved special words for the Atlantic Initiative, a project launched by King Mohammed VI to give landlocked African countries access to the Atlantic. 'This idea reflects a continental vision, one that doesn't leave any nation behind,' he said. He also linked this vision to past milestones, including the launch of Tanger Med two decades ago. 'What began as a bold idea is now the most important port in the Mediterranean,' he said. Looking ahead, Macron pointed to the upcoming opening of the Dakhla port as the next chapter in Morocco's ocean strategy. 'It marks more than infrastructure,' he said. 'It marks a determination to connect all of Africa to global maritime routes.' The French leader also reflected on the symbolism of the summit itself. 'It is not by accident that Morocco and France are co-hosting this event,' he said. 'We share a shoreline, a long-standing relationship, and a shared desire to face essential questions together.' Delegates explored ways to unlock investment for ocean-related infrastructure, ensure sustainable management of fish stocks, and build better ties between landlocked and coastal countries. Tags: Emmanuel MacronFrance Morocco tiesKing Mohammed VIUNOC-3


Morocco World
4 hours ago
- Morocco World
Sahrawi Movement for Peace Condemns Polisario's Failed Strategy
Doha – In an unsparing appeal to Sahrawi leadership, the Sahrawi Movement for Peace (MSP) has issued an open letter denouncing the Polisario Front's disastrous policies and urging immediate dialogue amidst catastrophic conditions in Tindouf refugee camps and suffocating international isolation. The letter, published on June 4, from Madrid, directly confronts the Sahrawi elite, demanding honest debate about the movement's future. 'We are at a turning point where we must decide if we persist in a dead-end path or seek realistic, viable and just solutions,' the MSP declared. The organization blasts the Polisario Front's unilateral resumption of war in November 2020 as an irredeemable error and a catastrophic misstep with 'predictable but devastating consequences.' According to the letter, Moroccan drones have established overwhelming military supremacy, decimating Polisario positions and shattering the 'status quo' established in 1991. The MSP exposes the Polisario's growing diplomatic irrelevance, stating that 'many countries have frozen their relations with the 'Sahrawi Republic'' while an increasing number of countries support Morocco's autonomy proposal as 'the most serious and credible' solution. Morocco is no longer merely navigating the Western Sahara file — it is dictating its terms. With the United Kingdom becoming the latest heavyweight to endorse Rabat's Autonomy Plan, alongside the United States, France, Spain, and nearly 120 countries, the tide has unmistakably turned. What began as a misguided separatist project, driven by obsolete ideology and regional agendas, has now collapsed under the weight of reality — giving way to a geopolitical landslide in Morocco's favor. 'The living conditions are deteriorating rapidly: shortages, insecurity, frustration. Despair has taken hold in the collective mind,' the MSP writes about the dire situation in the Tindouf camps. The movement's blistering critique comes after they condemned the Algerian regime in April following what they described as 'the cold-blooded murder of two young Sahrawis by Algerian soldiers' in the Dajla refugee camp. 'These atrocities are not isolated incidents. The Sahrawis living in the camps are victims of frequent shootings, intimidations and violent repressions by Algerian forces,' the MSP thundered in an urgent communiqué to the United Nations and MINURSO. This incident occurred shortly after Algerian troops reportedly gunned down Sid Ahmed Belali and wounded nine others near the Gara Djebilet mine, with three victims clinging to life in critical condition. A seat at the table Positioning itself as a credible alternative to the flailing and increasingly obsolete Polisario Front, the MSP is demanding a seat at the table in the UN-led political process on Western Sahara. The movement describes itself as 'the true voice for an important part of the Sahrawi population that aspires to a negotiated political solution.' American Enterprise Institute scholar Michael Rubin has reinforced this stance, urging the United Nations to strip recognition from the Polisario Front as the legitimate representative of the Sahrawi people. In an April 7 analysis, Rubin condemned the Polisario as 'a vestige of the Cold War' that 'holds wives and children as hostages to prevent refugee resettlement.' 'The Sahrawi Movement for Peace not only rejects violence but also seeks consensus across broad segments of the Sahrawi population,' Rubin wrote, noting the movement has secured recognition from Socialist International and growing support from the Spanish government. The MSP, first embraced Morocco's autonomy proposal in its 2022 Canary Islands Manifesto, reconvened recently at the same location to produce a second manifesto calling on 'the UN Secretary-General to persuade his Personal Envoy to invite and include the Sahrawis for Peace Movement as a fully recognized interlocutor in the political process.' In their scorching letter, the MSP warns that failed movements like 'the PKK in Turkey or the FARC in Colombia ended up surrendering unconditionally without achieving their objectives,' while others like 'the Biafran secessionists or the People's Mujahedeen of Iran saw their causes disappear into oblivion, pain, and chaos.' The MSP implores abandoning the failed armed struggle for 'political options based on political dialogue, in flexible frameworks of coexistence' modeled after 'moderate nationalisms like those of Iraqi Kurdistan, the Basque Country, Catalonia, or Northern Ireland in England.' 'It is time to leave behind divisions, acronyms, labels of 'traitors' or 'loyalists', 'heroes' or 'villains',' the MSP advocates, issuing a grave admonition that 'history will not be lenient with those who, at a crucial moment like this, choose silence or inaction.' Tags: Polisario FrontSahrawi Movement for PeaceWestern sahara


Morocco World
4 hours ago
- Morocco World
Vulnerable Moroccan Women Exploited in Spain, Then Expelled
Rabat — Two Moroccan women employed in Spain's lucrative strawberry harvest were reportedly recently sent back to Morocco under troubling circumstances—one while five months pregnant, and another after being diagnosed with cervical cancer. Unions and migrant rights organizations, cited in Spanish media reports, have condemned both incidents as blatant violations of labor laws and basic human dignity, accusing employers of exploitation and neglect. In contrast, the companies involved have downplayed the allegations and offered conflicting accounts in an apparent attempt to deflect responsibility. Unprotected pregnant worker The cases were extensively reported by the Spanish newspaper Publico in an article titled 'A pregnant woman and another with cancer sent back to Morocco: labor rights don't grow in strawberry fields'. In the first case, a group of Moroccan women were hired through Spain's Collective Management of Hiring in the Country of Origin (GECCO) program, which facilitates seasonal labor contracts for agricultural work. They arrived in Huelva in April to work for Berrys la Dehesa, a farm in the town of Cartaya. According to the Workers' Commissions union (CCOO), the women were left without formal contracts, pay slips, or social security registration. Believing their employment would continue, they had already sent their April wages home, leaving them stranded and without resources. CCOO states that the company stopped giving them work after May 9 and failed to provide the required documentation. 'They were left in a situation of extreme economic vulnerability,' said Teresa Pulido, provincial secretary of CCOO's Industry branch. 'They had no money, no legal protection, and were pressured to leave the country 'by their own means'—a clear violation of GECCO's commitments.' Among the group was a woman five months pregnant, whose case drew particular concern. The union filed formal complaints with Spain's Labor Inspectorate and the Government Subdelegation in Huelva. After the intervention, the company was eventually forced to sign contracts and process their Foreign Identity Cards (TIE), which are essential for eligibility in future work seasons. The women have since returned to Morocco, but CCOO has requested that they not be assigned to the same company in future campaigns, to prevent possible retaliation. When approached by journalists, the employer reportedly refused to answer questions. 'I have nothing to say,' he told Publico. According to CCOO, the employer also reacted aggressively during negotiations, allegedly telling a union representative: 'You're not going to mess with me, kid.' Discarded cancer patient In a second, even more alarming case, Zahra, a 47-year-old Moroccan woman who has worked in Huelva's berry fields for seven years, was sent back to Morocco after being diagnosed with cervical cancer. She had been receiving treatment at the Juan Ramón Jiménez Hospital in Huelva, with medication prescribed through September. The Association of Immigrant Women in Action (AMIA), which remains in contact with Zahra, says the decision to send her home has put her life at risk. 'She can't stop crying,' said Fátima Ezzohayry, AMIA's president. 'She has no money to continue treatment in Morocco, where everything costs money, and public healthcare is limited. If you can't afford it, you die faster.' Zahra is a single mother of six, with three children still in her care. She had stopped working on May 12 due to her illness and was depending on Spain's social security system, which she had contributed to for years as a seasonal worker. AMIA argues that she should have been granted medical leave, not deported. AMIA is now demanding her return to Spain to continue cancer treatment. 'After seven years of legal work under GECCO, she has rights—to sick leave, to care, to dignity,' said Ezzohayry. 'You can't just discard her like this.' The strawberry industry's main association, Interfresa, disputes AMIA's account. Through its Prelsi program—a corporate social responsibility initiative—Interfresa claims Zahra chose to return home. 'She requested to go back to Morocco after being diagnosed with terminal cancer, to be with her family,' said a Prelsi coordinator, who added that Zahra later phoned to thank them for the support in arranging her return. AMIA strongly refutes this version. 'That call was not to thank them,' said Ezzohayry. 'It was to ask for the hospital reports and lab tests she needs for her treatment in Morocco. Without them, doctors there would have to start all over again.' Zahra's former employer, Berrys La Fontanilla, and the cooperative Fresón de Palos, have reportedly declined to comment publicly. Fresón de Palos only told Publico that Zahra was 'supported in everything she needed.' As far as a death sentence The report states that this isn't the first time such a case has surfaced. In 2022, another Moroccan woman named Smahia, also working in Huelva under GECCO, was sent home after being diagnosed with terminal cervical cancer. She had been coming to Spain for 14 years and was supporting four children. According to the group Jornaleras en Lucha, Smahia's employer in Almonte dismissed her condition, suggesting she was 'faking it' to stay in Spain. She died shortly after returning to Morocco. The strawberry industry in Huelva, which spans 11,700 hectares, produces over 350,000 tons of fruit annually and contributes roughly 8% of Andalusia's GDP. Huelva accounts for 97% of Spain's red fruit production, making it a major exporter to countries like the UK, Germany, France, and the Netherlands. The sector depends heavily on migrant labor, particularly through the GECCO program, which brought 17,000 Moroccan women to Spain this year alone—4,000 for the first time. While GECCO is presented as a model of circular migration, these recent cases have sparked renewed scrutiny. 'Most employers do things right,' said CCOO's Pulido, 'but when cases like this come to light, it damages the reputation of the entire sector. We must ensure that those who violate the rules face consequences.' 'I wish I had drowned in the sea' The abuse of Moroccan seasonal laborers in Huelva is a long-standing issue, far from being limited to isolated incidents. In 2021, Morocco coordinated the repatriation of 170 women who had been stranded in Spain after facing urgent personal and health-related crises, including illness, the death of relatives, advanced pregnancies, or even childbirth. The repatriation followed negotiations between Spanish and Moroccan consulates and included COVID-19 precautions such as testing and hotel quarantine. That situation echoed the year before, when over 7,000 Moroccan women were trapped in Spain due to pandemic border closures, pleading for return while enduring economic and emotional hardship. These incidents are part of a longer pattern of abuse in Spain's berry industry. Moroccan seasonal workers have repeatedly raised alarm over exploitative labor practices in Huelva's farms — from unpaid wages and excessive hours to degrading treatment and, in some cases, sexual violence. A 2019 New York Times investigation quoted a worker who described the experience as being 'brought to be exploited and sent back,' adding: 'I wish I had drowned in the sea before coming here.' The persistence of such testimonies underscores the systemic nature of the abuses faced by migrant women working in Spain's lucrative red fruit sector.