Morocco, struggling with an influx of African migrants seeking passage
to nearby Europe, on Thursday imposed a new rule requiring such
travelers to fill out an online travel form for approval at least 96
hours before leaving home.
The procedure on a website carrying the Moroccan Foreign Ministry logo
applies to a range of African countries whose citizens currently can
enter Morocco without visas, except for Algeria and Tunisia.
The North African country has been grappling with a surge in migrants,
arriving mainly on flights into Casablanca. Many intend to get into
Europe and claim asylum by taking boats across a narrow Mediterranean
strait to Spain, or scaling fences into the Spanish enclaves of Ceuta or
Melilla bordering Morocco.
The new procedure “aims to facilitate passenger traffic ... It will help
Moroccan authorities know in advance the identity of travelers before
boarding (planes),” reads a document issued by Morocco’s embassy in Mali
and seen by Reuters.
Morocco has come under European Union pressure to reduce crossings of
illegal migrants to Spain and wants Rabat to set up “disembarkation
platforms” - centers where migrants’ asylum applications would be
processed. Morocco has rejected the idea.
In Africa, Morocco offers visa-free entry to the nationals of Algeria,
Tunisia, Mali, Niger, Senegal, Guinea Conakry, Congo Brazzaville, Gabon
and Ivory Coast.
The new travel regulation took effect on Thursday for citizens of Congo
Brazzaville, Guinea Conakry and Mali, according to a document from the
Moroccan airline RAM.
Mali, Guinea and to a lesser extent Congolese nationals comprise the bulk of Europe-bound migrants coming to Morocco.