Search Site

Maaden raises $1.25bn in sukuk offering

The Sukuk were offered in a five-year and a 10-year tranche.

DAE net profit up 36.2%

Revenues grew by 9 percent to $1.42bn from $1.31bn in 2023.

Borouge 2024 net profit $1.24bn

The company said it will maintain a $1.3bn dividend for 2025.

ADQ, Orion to establish JV

The partners commit to deploying $1.2bn in the next four years.

Alpha Dhabi acquires interest in NCTH

The deal increases NCTH's portfolio to 8 hotels with 1,500 keys.

Violence erupts in Morocco in operation to clear out migrants

A Moroccan policeman speaks with a group of African migrants in Casablanca. (AFP)
  • The area on the edge of Casablanca is periodically the scene of tensions between authorities and migrants living in scattered, unsanitary camps
  • The Moroccan Association for Human Rights (AMDH) denounced police "violence" during the operation

Rabat, Morocco–Migrants threw stones that injured an officer and damaged police vehicles during an operation to remove them from an illegal camp in Casablanca, local media reported on Monday.

Police questioned six migrants from sub-Saharan Africa suspected of involvement in the violence towards the officers, the reports said.

Located at Africa’s northwestern tip, Morocco is a transit country for many migrants, particularly sub-Saharan Africans. Fleeing poverty and violence, they seek to reach Europe from the kingdom’s Atlantic or Mediterranean coasts.

News website Hespress said suspects “threw stones at public security agents” trying to clear the unauthorized camp.

Public broadcaster SNRT reported on its website the injury to one officer and damage to five police vehicles.

Also read: Morocco raises migrants’ jail time over Melilla tragedy: lawyer

It was not immediately possible to obtain police confirmation about the reported incidents.

Images on social media showed migrants throwing stones and chasing police officers.

The area on the edge of Casablanca is periodically the scene of tensions between authorities and migrants living in scattered, unsanitary camps.

The Moroccan Association for Human Rights (AMDH) denounced police “violence” during the operation.

In a Facebook post, the rights group accused authorities of sending “back to Casablanca” migrants apprehended in other regions.