Morocco’s efforts to curb illegal migration are showing tangible results as the country’s interior ministry disclosed that it has stopped 78,685 migrants from illegally crossing into European Union territory in 2024, up 4.6 percent from a year earlier.
The interior ministry said the figures highlight growing migratory pressure in an unstable regional environment.
Among the migrants, 58 percent were from West Africa, 12 percent from North Africa where Morocco is located and nine percent from East and Central Africa.
Years of armed conflict across Africa’s Sahel region, unemployment and the impact of climate change on farming communities are among the reasons driving migrants towards Europe.
Morocco and neighbouring EU member Spain have strengthened cooperation against undocumented migration since they settled a separate diplomatic feud in 2022.
The North African country has for long been a departure point for African migrants aiming to reach Europe through the Mediterranean, the Atlantic or by jumping the fence surrounding the Spanish enclaves of Ceuta and Melilla in northern Morocco.
Last year, there were 14 group attempts to cross into Ceuta and Melilla, compared with six in 2023, the ministry said.
Moroccan authorities rescued 18,645 would-be migrants from unseaworthy boats in 2024, up 10.8 percent from 2023, it said.
Last month as many as 50 migrants may have drowned in the latest deadly wreck involving people trying to make the Atlantic crossing from West Africa to Spain’s Canary Islands, a migrant rights group said