Nationals from Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Sweden, Latvia and Estonia stranded in Morocco will be repatriated this Friday from Mohammed V airport in Casablanca. According to Nikolaj Harris, Denmark's ambassador to Morocco and Mauritania, buses with 300 Nordic citizens are «en route from all corners of Morocco» to the airport. The plane, which will land in Stockholm to repatriate these nationals, was set up by Sweden, «in close cooperation with Morocco and the Nordic teams». En étroite coopération avec @MarocDiplomatie ?? et en équipe nordiques ???????? nous amenons aujourd'hui à bout une grande opération de rapatriement de 300 ressortissants nordiques, estoniens ?? et lettons ?? vers #Stockholm . Merci à l'équipe de @SwedeninMA et @The_Nordics ! pic.twitter.com/lputbsUhYY — Niklas Kebbon (@SweAmbMorocco) April 17, 2020 In a previous tweet, Nikolaj Harris also thanked his Sweden and Nordic colleagues. «Swedes stranded abroad will return home by plane», reports TV4 News media, quoted by Aftonbladet. A total of four planes have been chartered for this operation. The first will depart from Morocco and Gambia on Friday, while two more will take off from Tunis and Amman on Monday. Des bus ? avec 300 citoyens nordiques ?????????? sont en route de tous les coins du ?? vers l'aéroport de Casablanca ✈️ pour retourner à leurs familles avec un vol spécial suédois. Merci à la Suède ?? et aux collègues nordiques pour la bonne coopération ?? pic.twitter.com/qkUdr6Unvn — Nikolaj Harris (@DKambMorocco) April 17, 2020 Although Rabat announced that it would end the special program put in place as part of the operation to facilitate the return of foreign tourists to their countries on Sunday March 22, the Kingdom has continued to collaborate with countries, including the United States, Great Britain and South Korea, among others, to repatriate their nationals. However, Morocco has not yet announced measures for its stranded citizens abroad, who number more than 18,000. Bilan Coronavirus dans le monde 259 465 151 Contaminations 5 174 661 Décès 235 366 205 Guérisons 53.8% de la population mondiale vaccinée