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Sick, distressed and out of resources, Moroccans stranded in the UK desperately await repatriation
Publié dans Yabiladi le 16 - 04 - 2020

Hundreds of Moroccans are currently awaiting repatriation as they found themselves stranded in the UK. Sick, distressed and running out of resources, these Moroccan nationals are desperately trying to leave the country and get home as soon as possible.
Around 18,000 Moroccans are stranded abroad, according to the Minister in charge of Moroccans Living Abroad. This number was communicated as thousands of these nationals have been pleading for their repatriation.
Most of them have found themselves in difficult situations after Morocco decided to implement a travel ban, prohibiting international flights and grounding all of its planes.
In the United Kingdom, and almost one month after Morocco implemented its coronavirus lockdown, several Moroccans have seen their situations go from bad to worse. Not very far from London, Mina Benchouai is one of the Moroccans that urgently need to be brought back home.
Vulnerable citizens
Her daughter, who has been housing her for more than a month, told Yabiladi that she needs to get her mother out of the UK as soon as possible. «My mother had cancer three times in the past and suffers heart problems», the daughter worryingly said. «She is now running out of the medicine that she is dependent on», she regretted.
But that is not the only thing that concerns the mother-of-two. While her son suffers from asthma, she is also taking care of her husband who «contracted the coronavirus a week ago». «My husband is quarantined at home because the hospital refuses to take him in, as they say his condition is not that serious», she explained.
The daughter has to take care of her sick mother and her children and make sure none of them contract the virus. «I try to separate them as much as I can (…) My mother, kids and I sleep in the living room because we can't go upstairs where my sick husband is isolating», the Moroccan lady said, desperately.
«All I want is get my mother out of here. I am torn apart and scared for her life because she is the most vulnerable of us all», she concluded.
Mina is not the only Moroccan senior citizen to fear for her life while stranded in the UK. Souad Sainy, another mother-of-two, was visiting her daughter in London when the lockdown and the series of public health measures were taken. When her flight was canceled, she had to be extremely cautious.
«I have to go back to Morocco», she told Yabiladi, referring to her serious health issues. «I am suffering from cirrhosis of the liver and staying here is just putting my life in jeopardy», she argued.
Souad, who avoids going out and locks herself at home, is unable to keep doing so for much longer. Back in Morocco, her aging mother and daughter heavily depend on her. «I left my mother in Morocco and she depends a lot on me, she is very old and needs assistance», she regretted.
Stranded and shelterless
While Souad and Mina are worried about their health, Mohamed*, a young Moroccan tourist, is roaming the streets of London with nowhere to go. After having spent all of his money, the young man who came to the UK as a tourist back in December is now sleeping on the streets after he found himself stranded and alone.
«As I was running out of money, I stayed in several places. The last place where I stayed was at a Moroccan's who lives here and who asked me to leave after his wife came», Mohamed recalled. «It has been six days now that I sleep in a park here in London with nowhere to go», he said with a sad voice.
After trying to get help, Mohamed was merely told to «wait». «As I wait for repatriation, I keep telling my parents that I am doing fine, I did not let them know that I am homeless now», he regretted.
While Mohamed has been able to survive on his own with no roof over his head, Rania knew that she would not be able to. The student, minor of age, found herself stuck when her school and campus closed their doors because of the coronavirus.
The Casablanca-native who studies in Dover, southeastern England, was forced to sofa-surf after she was required to leave the campus accommodation where she lived. «It has been one month that I don't have a fixed residence», said Rania, who went from one friend's house to the other during all that period.
«I stayed a couple of days at a classmate's house and then a couple of weeks at another friend's house», she recalled. Fortunately, the young student was finally able to go to her sister's place after she returned from a trip. «Although I am staying at my sister's, I want to go home to my parents», Rania said.
Oumaima was also in the same situation when her campus closed. «I felt lucky because I have family in the UK and I could go and stay with them», she told Yabiladi.
«I took transportation, as I had no other choice, and I went to their house (…) It's been one month that I am living with them but since then, I have been feeling like I am a burden to them», she said.
«They are a five-member family and I am the sixth person they are forced to shelter and feed during these already difficult and tight times», she regretted.
Forced to wait
Awaiting repatriatin, Oumaima, Rania and most of those stranded in the UK have desperately tried to contact the Moroccan embassy and consulate to enquire about their situation. However, after several calls, attempts and emails they have all been told to «wait and be patient».
Adam*, a London-born Moroccan, was kind enough to intervene and try to help the «almost 200 Moroccans stranded in London only». Speaking to Yabiladi on Thursday, the Moroccan man said that after several attempts he finally managed to reach an official from the Moroccan embassy in London to try and help those who are in the most difficult situations.
«They have promised to get medication to be transported from Morocco to the UK for the people who need it», Adam said. «Unfortunately, there are no repatriation plans for the moment but I have given the embassy a list with the names of some Moroccans who could no longer afford accommodation in London, to help house them», he reported.
Adam is trying his best to direct, translate and help the most vulnerable Moroccans stranded in London. Meanwhile, several of them are being left to their own device, hoping to go home and be reunited with their loved ones during these difficult times.
*Names were changed
Bilan Coronavirus dans le monde
259 465 151
Contaminations
5 174 661
Décès
235 366 205
Guérisons
53.8%
de la population mondiale vaccinée

Contaminations
Morts
Etats-Unis
48 092 052
775 403
Inde
34 544 882
466 980
Brésil
22 043 112
613 339
Royaume-uni
10 028 829
144 728
Russie
9 270 885
262 733
Turquie
8 654 142
75 618
France
7 586 146
119 686
Iran
6 092 822
129 280
Allemagne
5 595 674
100 123
Argentine
5 319 867
116 458
Espagne
5 111 842
87 904
Colombie
5 055 253
128 236
Italie
4 954 585
133 415
Indonésie
4 254 443
143 766
Mexique
3 867 976
292 850
Ukraine
3 530 969
87 999
Pologne
3 406 129
81 688
Afrique du sud
2 950 035
89 657
Philippines
2 828 660
47 682
Malaisie
2 602 835
30 147
Pays-Bas
2 552 933
19 546
Pérou
2 226 656
200 931
Thailande
2 081 992
20 544
Irak
2 076 922
23 725
Tchéquie
2 044 018
32 408
Canada
1 783 319
29 635
Roumanie
1 769 783
55 617
Chili
1 749 099
38 175
Japon
1 726 074
18 349
Belgique
1 659 025
26 743
Bangladesh
1 574 948
27 961
Israel
1 340 481
8 180
Pakistan
1 283 223
28 690
Serbie
1 241 492
11 385
Suède
1 194 636
15 142
Vietnam
1 155 778
24 243
Portugal
1 130 091
18 370
Slovaquie
1 105 970
14 056
Autriche
1 095 297
12 180
Kazakhstan
1 049 637
17 732
Hongrie
1 044 852
33 519
Suisse
970 753
11 435
Cuba
961 458
8 299
Maroc
949 263
14 770
Jordanie
928 256
11 429
Grèce
901 661
17 612
Georgie
822 383
11 679
Népal
820 004
11 513
Emirats Arabes Unis
741 643
2 145
Tunisie
716 702
25 356
Bulgarie
682 552
27 778
Liban
662 269
8 676
Biélorussie
645 069
4 995
Guatemala
615 725
15 870
Croatie
582 769
10 505
Azerbaidjan
578 627
7 709
Costa Rica
566 296
7 280
Sri Lanka
559 605
14 205
Arabie Saoudite
549 590
8 828
Irlande
542 146
5 652
Bolivie
531 428
19 096
Equateur
524 432
33 128
Birmanie
519 731
19 049
Panama
476 611
7 358
Danemark
467 022
2 842
Paraguay
462 453
16 365
Lituanie
460 467
6 603
Gaza
458 956
4 783
Corée du sud
429 002
3 401
Vénézuela
426 799
5 097
Koweit
413 198
2 465
Slovénie
408 623
5 114
République Dominicaine
404 754
4 195
Uruguay
398 436
6 119
Mongolia
379 544
1 976
Honduras
377 712
10 401
Ethiopie
370 712
6 708
Libye
369 455
5 414
Moldavie
360 261
8 950
Egypte
353 024
20 109
Arménie
335 738
7 379
Oman
304 514
4 113
Bahreïn
277 481
1 394
Bosnie/Herzégovine
271 323
12 386
Singapoure
257 510
678
Kenya
254 816
5 332
Norvège
251 397
1 049
Lettonie
249 037
4 063
Qatar
242 518
611
Estonie
219 259
1 763
Nigeria
213 677
2 974
Macédonie
213 306
7 474
Zambie
210 099
3 667
Algérie
209 463
6 035
Australie
203 642
1 978
Albanie
197 776
3 063
Botswana
194 652
2 416
Ouzbekistan
191 956
1 385
Kirghizistan
182 996
2 732
Finlande
179 534
1 302
Kosovo
161 037
2 983
Afghanistan
157 032
7 306
Montenegro
155 694
2 268
Mozambique
151 503
1 940
Zimbabwe
133 747
4 703
Chypre
131 462
591
Ghana
130 920
1 209
Namibie
129 126
3 571
Ouganda
127 305
3 250
Cambodge
119 977
2 914
El Salvador
118 041
3 762
Chine
111 058
4 849
Cameroun
106 794
1 791
Rwanda
100 277
1 341
Maldives
91 046
248
Jamaique
90 905
2 365
Luxembourg
87 352
862
Sénégal
73 973
1 885
Trinité-et-Tobago
67 664
2 009
Laos
65 818
142
Angola
65 080
1 731
Malawi
61 867
2 304
Cote d'Ivoire
61 660
703
Congo (Kinshasa)
58 060
1 104
Fidji
52 474
695
Suriname
50 629
1 158
Syrie
47 558
2 719
Eswatini
46 506
1 248
Madagascar
44 072
967
Soudan
41 959
3 114
Malta
38 928
464
Mauritanie
38 881
822
Cabo Verde
38 345
349
Guyane
37 524
980
Gabon
37 223
276
Papua New Guinea
34 707
542
Guinée-Bissau
30 751
387
Belize
29 967
569
Tanzanie
26 261
730
Togo
26 219
243
Haiti
24 974
723
Benin
24 850
161
Barbade
24 432
215
Seychelles
23 197
125
Somalie
22 969
1 324
Bahamas
22 696
671
Lesotho
21 735
662
Burundi
20 351
38
Timor-Leste
19 820
122
Maurice (Ile)
18 979
240
Congo (Brazzaville)
18 837
349
Tajikistan
17 493
125
Islande
17 152
35
Nicaragua
17 152
212
Mali
17 096
601
Taiwan*
16 544
848
Andorre
16 426
131
Burkina Faso
15 514
265
Brunei Darussalam
14 771
97
Guinée équatoriale
13 547
170
Djibouti
13 503
186
Sainte-Lucie
12 927
279
Sud Soudan
12 701
133
République Centrafricaine
11 708
101
Nouvelle-Zélande
10 790
41
Gambia
9 988
342
Yémen
9 972
1 942
Erithrée
7 250
57
Niger
6 902
248
Guinée-Bissau
6 438
146
Sierra Leone
6 400
121
Grenada
5 880
200
Saint-Marin
5 872
93
Liberia
5 819
287
République Dominicaine
5 642
35
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
5 446
74
Tchad
5 107
175
Comores
4 478
150
Liechtenstein
4 396
61
Antigue et Barbuda
4 138
117
Sao Tome and Principe
3 731
56
Monaco
3 612
36
Saint Kitts and Nevis
2 774
28
Bhutan
2 633
3
Summer Olympics 2020
865
0
Diamond Princess
712
13
Holy See
27
0
Iles Salomon
20
0
MS Zaandam
9
2
Palau
8
0
Vanuatu
6
1
Iles Marshall
4
0
Samoa
3
0
Kiribati
2
0
Micronésie
1
0
Tonga
1
0
Source: Université Johns Hopkins WHO


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