Morocco adopted a Nationwide Technique on Immigration and Asylum in 2013 and outlined plans for a proper asylum legislation. Greater than a decade later, that legislation has nonetheless not been carried out.
“In follow, UNHCR registers asylum seekers and conducts refugee standing willpower in utility of its mandate said within the 1951 Refugee Conference and its Statute,” Muriel Juramie, UNHCR’s interim consultant in Morocco, instructed Al Jazeera.
Al Jazeera contacted the Moroccan authorities for remark however didn’t get a response.
Recognised refugees can then get hold of documentation and apply for residence permits.
Juramie mentioned UNHCR has known as for “the adoption of a complete nationwide asylum legislation in Morocco”, arguing it could convey “readability, predictability, and consistency” to procedures, set up attraction mechanisms and formally codify the rights of recognised refugees.
With out it, organisations working with refugees say safety rests on an improvised system slightly than a coherent authorized framework.
“That is an uncommon scenario globally: a sovereign state successfully delegating a core safety operate to a global company, not by express authorized design, however by default,” mentioned Rachid Chakri of Fondation Orient-Occident.
“Refugees arriving in Morocco in the present day face a system that isn’t designed to guard them over the medium or long run,” he mentioned. “Many will spend years in authorized precarity – registered however undocumented, current however unintegrated, seen to the state primarily as a migration administration problem slightly than as rights-holders.”
For many who attain Morocco, there isn’t any state-run refugee lodging system. Help teams fill a part of the void, however just for essentially the most weak and solely when sources permit. Some asylum seekers sleep tough or below bridges. Others depend on overstretched charities for non permanent shelter, meals or authorized assist.
On paper, recognised refugees have the proper to work. In actuality, nonetheless, entry to work stays restricted. Administrative obstacles, recognition of {qualifications} and labour market circumstances all limit alternatives, whereas acquiring a residence allow can take time, the UNHCR mentioned.
Based on UNHCR, simply 80 refugees – together with 14 girls – had accessed formal jobs, together with eight internships, out of greater than 22,000 registered refugees and asylum seekers.
With out lodging, cash, or {qualifications}, refugees battle to realize employment.
Earlier than the battle, Ali was in class and hoped to go to school. In Rabat, that future feels distant. He has accomplished a brief course in aged care and now works as an unpaid intern, however says his coronary heart situation usually makes even that troublesome.
He may attempt to attain Europe through the Spanish enclaves of Ceuta or Melilla in North Africa, however says his well being makes that not possible, whereas crossing the Mediterranean is simply too harmful, and too costly.
In the meantime, resettlement, which UNHCR grants in some cases primarily based on vulnerability and out there quotas, and is usually spoken of by refugees as the one possible way out, feels distant.
In 2025, Juramie mentioned, “100” had been submitted to resettlement international locations, primarily in North America and Europe, that are rising more and more proof against permitting refugees in.
So Ali waits, for a call that will by no means come, and with the fixed concern of being picked up by police and despatched south.

