Rabat, Madrid & Brussels Join Forces against Human Trafficking Mafias

Morocco, Spain and the European Union have agreed to join forces in the fight against the growing international human traffickers who are exploiting the misery, the vulnerability and the dreams of poor people aspiring for better life.

The agreement was announced following the meeting held Friday in Rabat between Moroccan Interior minister Abdelouafi Laftit, EU Commissioner for Home Affairs Ylva Johansson and Spanish interior minister Fernando Grande-Marlaska.

During the meeting, they highlighted the solid results of their cooperation based on shared responsibility in matters of migration and agreed to renew their partnership in order to work together to tackle human smuggling networks, in particular following the emergence of new, extremely violent, methods adopted by such criminal networks.
A press release issued by the European Commission said the ”new operational anti-smuggling partnership” between the Commission and Morocco to tackle human trafficking will cover, in particular, support for border management, enhanced police cooperation (including joint investigations), awareness-raising on the dangers of unlawful migration and enhanced cooperation with EU agencies responsible for home affairs.

The Commissioner and the two Ministers regretted every death of people attempting unlawful entry, including those that occurred during the recent distressing events on 24 June 2022, added the communiqué.
They also regretted the injuries, including to members of the Moroccan and Spanish border forces. These events put traditional methods of combating human smuggling under strain.

Besides the human tragedy, they showed how very dangerous and violent human smuggling networks were, and the extent to which they were prepared to take any risk.

Investigations were under way to clarify the circumstances surrounding these events. At the same time, the Commissioner and the two Ministers welcomed the fact-finding commission set up by the Moroccan National Human Rights Council. The protection of fundamental rights is a value shared by Morocco and the European Union, the statement said.

“Morocco is a strategic and committed partner of the European Union, with which the EU has been cooperating on migration issues for a number of years”, said the European Commission.

The Moroccan National Immigration and Asylum Strategy (SNIA) is one of the most well-developed migration management systems today, in both legislative and institutional terms, and has enabled the regularization of the situation of thousands of migrants, and their integration into Moroccan society, underlined the Commission, recalling King Mohammed VI was appointed leader for Africa on the issue of migration by African Heads of State.
The European Commission has praised Morocco’s efforts in the fight against illegal migration. These efforts have resulted, in the first half of this year, in preventing more than 26,000 irregular departures – one tenth of them saved at sea. In the same period, Morocco has dismantled around a hundred criminal trafficking networks.

In connection with the New Pact on Migration and Asylum, the Commission is establishing migration partnerships with the countries of origin, transit and destination, to combat human smuggling networks, but also to address the root causes of migration and improve legal migration routes so that people do not feel the need to risk their lives on dangerous journeys.

On Thursday, Moroccan Govt. Spokesman Mustapha Baitas said the latest violent mass crossing attempt made by illegal sub-Saharan migrants from Northern Moroccan region of Nador into Spanish enclave of Melilla, was a “premeditated and planned” operation.

Videos showed that some 2000 migrants stormed the fence in Nador assaulting security forces using sticks and stones as well as acid and knives, in the most violent crossings ever reported in northern Morocco.

About Khalid Al Mouahidi 4510 Articles
Khalid Al Mouahidi : A binational from the US and Morocco, Khalid El Mouahidi has worked for several american companies in the Maghreb Region and is currently based in Casablanca, where he is doing consulting jobs for major international companies . Khalid writes analytical pieces about economic ties between the Maghreb and the Mena Region, where he has an extensive network