Publications /

Back
Get Africa Involved: Morocco’s Lead in the Management of Immigration
Authors
Amal El Ouassif
August 30, 2019

The global migration problem cannot be wished away; it has to be managed. Morocco provides an example of how responsibility for migration management can be handled by African states.

The latest statistics of the European Border and Coast Guard Agency (FRONTEX) identify the Western Mediterranean route from Morocco to Spain as the busiest migratory route into Europe last year, with 57,034 illegal attempts to enter the continent recorded. However, a parallel look at the Moroccan government’s data shows that over the same period of time, the Moroccan authorities prevented 88,761 attempts at irregular border crossing at Morocco’s own frontiers with other African countries, a discrepancy which speaks to a fundamental truth: irregular migration is most certainly not solely a European issue. And there are plenty of lessons to be learnt from the way a country like Morocco handles this challenge. 

Notwithstanding all the alarmist reports in European media outlets, the fact remains that African migration remains confined largely within the continent, with an estimated 21 million African migrants currently living in African countries different from their own as of 2015, the latest date for which reliable statistics are available. Similarly, most of the refugees fleeing the violence in the Middle East have settled in the Middle East or surrounding states, in countries like Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan. For obvious reasons, people seek refuge in the nearest safe country before they explore further locations in response to worsening economic or security opportunities. 

And the pressures of migration are only likely to intensify. According to the latest figures from the World Bank, more than half of the very poor worldwide live in sub-Saharan Africa, yet it is this same region that will be experiencing the biggest demographic boom by the end of the century. Recent statistics from the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs (DESA) suggest that the population of sub-Saharan Africa will double by 2050, making it the region that will account for about 50% of world population growth by 2050. Nigeria, for instance, is expected to be the third most populated country in the world by 2050, after China and India. The conclusion is, therefore, inevitable: such trends will translate into massive movements within and outside the borders of Africa.

 

Figure I: World Population Growth Expectations by 2050

PCNSSource: Data retrieved from UN DESA/Population Division, ‘World Population Prospects 2019: Highlights’, 2019.
 

Pessimist observers see this African demographic boom as a drag on countries’ political stability prospects, while optimists perceive a demographic dividend that has the potential to transform the life of Africans through increased productivity and manufacturing. Either way, handling such a challenge will require time huge efforts. And until the demographic dividend is translated into real economic progress, there will be continuous population movement across African borders in search of economic opportunities. Thus, the efforts of decision-makers should go towards better management of migration, rather than concentrating on efforts to eradicate a movement which cannot be eradicated.

The Need for Success Stories: A Close Look at the Moroccan National Immigration and Asylum Strategy

As far as migration management is concerned, Morocco is an interesting example to consider. It is a case study that shows how an African country at the crossroads between Europe and Africa evolved from a generator of migration to a transit and destination country of migrants. Beginning in the 1950s, Moroccan migrants travelled to Europe, availing themselves of a variety of regulated migration schemes. Later – by the early 1990s – waves of Moroccans and other nationals of African countries resorted to irregular migration in response to the great tightening of European border procedures, and because the EU’s expansion to Central and Eastern Europe opened up opportunities for cheap labour, therefore further restricting the need for migrants from outside Europe. 

Yet a decade later, Morocco became a destination country for hundreds of thousands of sub-Saharan Africans and later refugees from Syria and Iraq. All these momentous changes within less than half a century would pose a huge challenge to any middle-income country with lots of economic and social difficulties, like Morocco. Nonetheless, the response was to meet the challenge head-on.

In 2013, shortly after the events of the Arab uprising and the refugee crisis that followed, Morocco put in place its National Strategy on Immigration and Asylum, which seeks to align humanitarian principles with practical policies. This strategy resulted in the regularisation of the administrative situation of 50,000 migrants in Morocco, who obtained residence permits and access to employment and education. Additionally, in recent years Morocco has voiced its ambition to serve as a bridge between Africa and the EU in terms of migration management. Hence, at the 28th Summit of the African Union in Addis Ababa in 2017, Morocco was designated by African countries to promote the African Agenda on Migration, unveiled in more precisely detail by King Mohammed VI in a message to other African countries early last year. This translated into the creation of the African Migration Observatory in Rabat, which aims at providing better data on African mobility to enhance evidence-based policymaking. Morocco was also the host of the United Nations Conference on Migration that resulted on the adoption of the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration in December last year.

To be sure, these are just preparatory steps, designed to forge a common African approach to migration management. And the continent still lacks success stories originating from Africa itself, to rebuild hope and assert the possibility that African migration can be enriching to African countries and to Europe. Still, a country like Morocco has shown that it can be a reliable partner in the migration debate not merely by acting as a ‘buffer zone’ for immigrants heading to Europe, but by adopting its own national migration integration policies, and by trying to forge an African-wide approach to the problem. Morocco has benefitted from decades of advanced cooperation with the European Union, and this experience, coupled with the determination of the highest authorities of the state, have led to the creation of a unique agenda on migration. 

This vision needs to be further supported by European partners, as well as African governments. Indeed, the centre of decision-making on issues concerning African countries, like the one of migration, needs to shift towards African governments and civil society organisations in these countries. This will generate a broader sense of ownership of the problem. For, while many African countries remain mired in poor governance and deficient economic performance, there are among African nations also countries like Morocco, who can take a lead in handling the continent’s migration pressures. 

Amal El Ouassif is…

Amal El Ouassif is a research assistant in International Relations and Geopolitics at the Policy Center for the New South in Morocco. Prior to this, she worked as a programme coordinator at the Westminster Foundation for Democracy and served as a consultant in the (GIZ) in Morocco. Her area of interest include Africa- Europe cooperation, security and migration.

 

This article was originally published by the Royal United Services Institute and has been republished here with their kind permission.

RELATED CONTENT

  • Authors
    January 20, 2021
    The self-declared Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic’s (SADR) declaration on the Guerguerat crisis, in November 2020, to terminate the 1991 ceasefire agreement and go to war with Morocco raises a problem regarding the legality of third States granting State recognition to the self-declared SADR. International law imposes an obligation on third States to not grant ‘premature recognition.’ Moreover, premature recognition would constitute illegal intervention in the internal affairs of t ...
  • Authors
    Céline PAJON
    January 8, 2021
    Durant  son  mandat  (2012-2020),  le  Premier  ministre  Shinzo  Abe  s’est évertué  à  démontrer  le  fort  intérêt  duJapon  pour  l’Afrique,s’engageant notamment sur un soutien financier d’un total de 60 milliards de dollars lors des sommets de la Tokyo International Conference on African Development(TICAD)  en  2013  et  2016  et  dévoilant  sa  vision  pour «un  Indo-Pacifiquelibre  et ouvert»(«Free  and  Open  Indo-Pacific»–FOIP)  lors  de  la TICADVI à Nairobi. Pour autant, ...
  • Authors
    Sabine Cessou
    January 4, 2021
    Mali, Niger, Burkina Faso… L’insécurité fait tache d’huile au Sahel, menaçant de s’étendre aux pays du Golfe de Guinée. Le terrorisme a entraîné la formation de milices d’auto-défense communautaires, et ainsi créé des « friches » sécuritaires dans tout le Sahel, du Bassin du lac Tchad à la région du Liptako-Gourma. Les budgets consacrés à la défense augmentent, contrairement à ceux qui soutiennent le capital humain, santé et éducation. Dans un contexte de croissance démographique so ...
  • Authors
    December 22, 2020
    “When I got home late that night, the house was dark and Michelle was already asleep. After taking a shower and going through a stack of mail, I slipped under the covers and began drifting off. In that luminal space between wakefulness and sleep, I imagined myself stepping toward a portal of some sort, a bright and cold and airless place, uninhabited and severed from the world. And behind me, out of the darkness, I heard a voice, sharp and clear, as if someone were right next to me, ...
  • December 16, 2020
    President Trump may not enact his threatened US drawdown of troops from the Sahel, but President Biden will still face pressure to end America’s “forever wars” and reduce the number of American lives and treasure lost to fighting terrorism in Africa. If the United States pulls back from...
  • December 14, 2020
    Foreign powers are grappling for influence across the African continent, but competition has been particularly fierce in the Red Sea. With Ethiopia, long viewed as a bulwark against instability in the Horn of Africa, emerging from conflict, there is a new opportunity to cement the peace...
  • Authors
    December 7, 2020
    The pandemic is accelerating history, in the sense that it is leading to the speeding up of some recent trends. In the case of globalization, the pandemic will not reverse it, but it will reshape it. Here we take a bird’s eye view of global trade during the pandemic, relate it to previous trends, and guess how global value chain managers and government trade policymakers are likely to react. A Bird’s Eye View of Global Trade during the Pandemic World trade took a deep dive during ...
  • November 27, 2020
    The Policy Center for the New South is hosting a joint webinar in partnership with the ASEANplus Platform of the Ghent University under the theme “Europe, Africa and Asia: What Partnership Dynamics after 2021?”. The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the effects of globalization and defi...
  • Authors
    Sabine Cessou
    November 27, 2020
    « Une terre promise » (Fayard), livre événement de Barack Obama, couvre sa campagne et les trois premières années de sa présidence. L’Egypte est le pays d’Afrique dont il parle le plus – et pas seulement à cause du Printemps arabe. L’Afrique occupe à peine 40 pages sur les 840 que comptent les mémoires de Barack Obama. La crise financière internationale, la loi Obama Care et le retrait des troupes d’Irak et Afghanistan ont retenu l’attention du président fraîchement élu. C’est l’Eg ...
  • November 27, 2020
    The Policy Center for the New South is hosting a joint webinar in partnership with the ASEANplus Platform of the Ghent University under the theme “Europe, Africa and Asia: What Partnership Dynamics after 2021?”. The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the effects of globalization and defi...