Maghreb Edition

Morocco: Uproar in Morocco as death toll in textile flooded workshop rises to 28F

Posted On 11 February 2021

Number of times this article was read : 550

By Hicham Rafih – Authorities in Morocco faced mounting questions and calls for accountability Wednesday, two days after 28 people died when heavy rain flooded a basement factory in the port city of Tangiers. “The victims were trapped with no way to get out” and drowned, senior fire and rescue service official Abderrahim Kabajj told Morocco’s 2M television station. An official statement on the incident referred to an “illegal textiles operation”.  But a police source told AFP the status of the workshop, located in a residential area in the city’s southeast, was “yet to be confirmed”, adding the owner had not been questioned as he was still in intensive care.

Morocco’s informal sector plays a key role in the economy, with over half of the country’s textile and leather production coming from unregulated operations, according to Morocco’s employers’ association. Many fail to meet official safety standards, it says. The workshop owner’s sister took to YouTube to defend her brother, saying the business was legal. “He pays the taxes and the employees are declared to the CNSS,” she said, referring to Morocco’s social security system. She alleged the state was trying to shirk its responsibilities for the flooding.

A representative of the country’s textile industry association also said that “the company has business registration and is completely in order”. Requesting anonymity, he said there were “hundreds” of such  workshops in Tangiers, “keeping alive thousands of families”.

Illegal?

“I can’t imagine they would all be illegal as they are working for big international brands,” he said, without specifying which. He pointed to “failing infrastructure” and called for accountability. The deaths have caused an outcry in the North African country. The L’Economiste newspaper in an editorial denounced “factories of poverty” and said the tragedy had refocused attention on labour rights. Mohamed Benaissa, head of Morocco’s Northern Observatory for Human Rights, said the workshop “has existed for 10 years”, pointing to a high voltage power connection “requiring official certification”.

It was not the only such factory in Tangiers, he told AFP previously, adding that his association had observed “many other workshops in the basements of houses without respect for safety regulations, even during the coronavirus pandemic”.  In a statement Tuesday, the CDT union denounced the proliferation of “illegal” workshops in Tangiers, the “exploitation of workers” and “the absence of appropriate working conditions”. A recent central bank report said the informal sector accounted for a third of Morocco’s gross domestic product.

Meanwhile, a town planning official told media the building was part of a housing project constructed near a river at flood risk. Abdelaziz Janati, a lawyer and human rights activist, told AFP the status of such workshops was often problematic. “If they (workshops) are unauthorised, it’s considered a crime,” he said. “But it’s also a crime if they are authorised, because they don’t respect the conditions necessary for industrial production and they’re not in an industrial zone.”

AFP

Subscribe to Urgent Notifications and Newsletter

Most Recent Stories from the Region

Egypt joins China’s tariff-free initiative as Beijing opens its market to nearly all of AfricaF

Egypt joins China’s tariff-free initiative as Beijing opens its market to nearly all of AfricaF

Egypt joined China’s expanded zero-tariff scheme on 1 May 2026, gaining duty-free access to the Chinese market alongside 52 other African countries with diplomatic ties to Beijing. The move eliminates tariffs that previously ran from 8 to 30 percent on key Egyptian exports, though the arrangement is a two-year preferential window through April 2028 rather than a permanent deal, and non-tariff barriers like rules of origin and phytosanitary standards still apply.

While its minorities are winning World Cup games, France is preparing to pivot to the far rightF

While its minorities are winning World Cup games, France is preparing to pivot to the far rightF

As France’s multiethnic World Cup squad marches toward the semifinals, the country’s 2027 presidential race is tilting hard right. Right-winger Marine Le Pen leads first-round polling and beats nearly every rival in hypothetical runoffs. With RN president Jordan Bardella waiting in the wings and Jean-Luc Mélenchon consolidating the left, France’s fractured center may not be able to stop either a far-right or hard-left runoff in 2027. Here is our take.

Written by The North Africa Journal

The North Africa Journal is a leading English-language publication focused on North Africa. The Journal covers primarily the Maghreb region and expands its general coverage to the Sahel, Egypt, and beyond, when events in those regions affect the broader North Africa geography. The Journal does not have any affiliation with any institution and has been independent since its founding in 1996. Our position is to always bring our best analysis of events affecting the region, and remain as neutral as humanly possible. Our coverage is not limited to one single topic, but ranges from economic and political affairs, to security, defense, social and environmental issues. We rely on our full staff analysts and editors to bring you best-in-class analysis. We also work with sister company MEA Risk LLC, to leverage the presence on the ground of a solid network of contributors and experts. Information on MEA Risk can be found at www.MEA-Risk.com.