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Tag: Morocco

  • Tourists from Morocco shot dead after straying into Algerian waters

    Tourists from Morocco shot dead after straying into Algerian waters

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    Two men reportedly killed after straying past Morocco’s maritime border into Algeria on jet skis.

    Two French-Moroccan men have reportedly been shot and killed after they accidentally crossed Morocco’s maritime border with Algeria on water scooters, according to Moroccan media reports.

    The incident took place on Tuesday after five men lost their bearings while exploring the sea on jet skis. France confirmed on Friday one of its citizens had been killed.

    The foreign ministry in Paris reported the death without providing the circumstances, saying another one of its citizens was jailed in “an incident involving several of our nationals”.

    Mohamed Kissi told Moroccan news website 360.ma that he, his brother Bilal, and two friends were on vacation and riding jetskis off the waters of the Moroccan town of Saidia as the sun began to set.

    “We were low on gas for the water scooters and were drifting. In the darkness we found ourselves in Algerian waters,” Kissi was quoted as saying.

    A speedboat with the word “Algeria” emblazoned on the side carrying naval forces approached the group.

    After a brief exchange, Kissi said Algerian forces fired on the group, and his brother Bilal and their friend Abdelali Mechouer were killed. Their other friend, Smail Snabe, was wounded and detained by Algerian forces.

    The French-Moroccan said he swam to escape until he was rescued by Moroccan maritime police.

    The French foreign ministry said its “crisis support centre and our embassies in Morocco and Algeria are in close contact with our fellow citizens’ families, to whom we are offering every support”.

    No diplomatic relations

    No immediate response was available from Algerian authorities.

    A cousin of the brothers, actor Abdelkarim Kissi, asked Moroccan authorities to bring the case to international courts.

    “They killed Bilal Kissi, my little cousin,” Kissi wrote on social media, “His only fault was crossing the Algerian territorial waters.”

    According to 360.ma, a funeral was held for Bilal Kissi on Thursday in the Moroccan town of Bni Drar. The outlet also reported that Mechouer’s family is seeking the repatriation of his body, recovered by Algerian forces.

    When asked Thursday about the incident, Moroccan government spokesperson Mustapha Baitas said “these issues are within the jurisdiction of the judicial authority’’ and did not provide further comment.

    The border between Algeria and Morocco has been closed since 1994 and the two have had no diplomatic relations since Algiers cut ties with Rabat in 2021.

     

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  • Morocco secures first Women’s World Cup win as Nouhaila Benzina makes history | CNN

    Morocco secures first Women’s World Cup win as Nouhaila Benzina makes history | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    Morocco earned a surprise victory over South Korea on Sunday to secure the country’s first win at a Women’s World Cup in a match where Nouhaila Benzina also made history.

    Striker Ibtissam Jraidi scored the only goal of the match in a 1-0 victory as Morocco became the third debutants to win a game at this tournament.

    It was a match filled with significant landmarks.

    Defender Benzina started for Morocco to become the first player to wear a hijab at a senior-level Women’s World Cup. Benzina, making her first appearance at the tournament, almost capped an impressive performance with a goal, but volleyed over the crossbar.

    Jraidi’s sixth-minute header was also Morocco’s first ever goal in the tournament.

    “We are just so pleased our efforts have paid off. This victory is for Morocco and Arabs, it’s the fruit of our hard work,” Jraidi told reporters, per Reuters.

    Morocco suffered a heavy 6-0 loss to Germany in its opening game, but was much improved in Adelaide.

    Ranked 55 places below South Korea in the world rankings, it was a surprise when the debutants took the early lead but Morocco held on for a memorable win. Teenager Casey Phair had a chance to level for South Korea from close range late on but shot wide.

    South Korea will be eliminated from the competition should Germany win or draw against Colombia later on Sunday.

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  • The EU’s reply to Qatargate: Nips, tucks and paperwork

    The EU’s reply to Qatargate: Nips, tucks and paperwork

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    Voiced by artificial intelligence.

    STRASBOURG — The European Parliament’s response to Qatargate: Fight corruption with paperwork.

    When Belgian police made sweeping arrests and recovered €1.5 million from Parliament members in a cash-for-influence probe last December, it sparked mass clamoring for a deep clean of the institution, which has long languished with lax ethics and transparency rules, and even weaker enforcement.

    Seven months later, the Parliament and its president, Roberta Metsola, can certainly claim to have tightened some rules — but the results are not much to shout about. With accused MEPs Eva Kaili and Marc Tarabella back in the Parliament and even voting on ethics changes themselves, the reforms lack the political punch to take the sting out of a scandal that Euroskeptic forces have leaped on ahead of the EU election next year.

    “Judge us on what we’ve done rather [than] on what we didn’t,” Metsola told journalists earlier this month, arguing that Parliament has acted swiftly where it could. 

    While the Parliament can claim some limited improvements, calls for a more profound overhaul in the EU’s only directly elected institution — including more serious enforcement of existing rules — have been met with finger-pointing, blame-shifting and bureaucratic slow-walking. 

    The Parliament dodged some headline-worthy proposals in the process. It declined to launch its own inquiry into what really happened, it decided not to force MEPs to declare their assets and it won’t be stripping any convicted MEPs of their gold-plated pensions.

    Instead, the institution favored more minimal nips and tucks. The rule changes amount to much more bureaucracy and more potential alarm bells to spot malfeasance sooner — but little in the way of stronger enforcement of ethics rules for MEPs.

    EU Ombudsman Emily O’Reilly, who investigates complaints about EU administration lamented that the initial sense of urgency to adopt strict reforms had “dissipated.” After handing the EU a reputational blow, she argued, the scandal’s aftermath offered a pre-election chance, “to show that lessons have been learned and safeguards have been put in place.”

    Former MEP Richard Corbett, who co-wrote the Socialists & Democrats group’s own inquiry into Qatargate and favors more aggressive reforms, admitted he isn’t sure whether Parliament will get there.  

    “The Parliament is getting to grips with this gradually, muddling its way through the complex field, but it’s too early to say whether it will do what it should,” he said. 

    Bags of cash

    The sense of resignation that criminals will be criminals was only one of the starting points that shaped the Parliament’s response. 

    “We will never be able to prevent people taking bags of cash. This is human nature. What we have to do is create a protection network,” said Raphaël Glucksmann, a French MEP who sketched out some longer-term recommendations he hopes the Parliament will take up. 

    EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT ELECTION POLL OF POLLS

    For more polling data from across Europe visit POLITICO Poll of Polls.

    Another is that the Belgian authorities’ painstaking judicial investigation is still ongoing, with three MEPs charged and a fourth facing imminent questioning. Much is unknown about how the alleged bribery ring really operated, or what the countries Qatar, Morocco and Mauritania really got for their bribes.

    On top of that, Parliament was occasionally looking outward rather than inward for people to blame. 

    Metsola’s message in the wake of the scandal was that EU democracy was “under attack” by foreign forces. The emphasis on “malign actors, linked to autocratic third countries” set the stage for the Parliament’s response to Qatargate: blame foreign interference, not an integrity deficit. 

    Instead of creating a new panel to investigate how corruption might have steered Parliament’s work, Parliament repurposed an existing committee on foreign interference and misinformation to probe the matter. The result was a set of medium- and long-term recommendations that focus as much on blocking IT contractors from Russia and China as they do on holding MEPs accountable — and they remain merely recommendations. 

    Metsola did also turn inward, presenting a 14-point plan in January she labeled as “first steps” of a promised ethics overhaul. The measures are a finely tailored lattice-work of technical measures that could make it harder for Qatargate to happen again, primarily by making it harder to lobby the Parliament undetected.

    The central figure in Qatargate, an Italian ex-MEP called Pier Antonio Panzeri, enjoyed unfettered access to the Parliament, using it to give prominence to his human rights NGO Fight Impunity, which held events and even struck a collaboration deal with the institution. 

    This 14-point package, which Metsola declared is now “done,” includes a new entry register, a six-month cooling-off period banning ex-MEPs from lobbying their colleagues, tighter rules for events, stricter scrutiny of human rights work — all tailored to ensure a future Panzeri hits a tripwire and can be spotted sooner.

    Notably, however, an initial idea to ban former MEPs from lobbying for two years after leaving office — which would mirror the European Commission’s rules — instead turned into just a six-month “cooling off” period.

    Internal divisions

    Behind the scenes, the house remains sharply divided over just how much change is needed. Many MEPs resisted bigger changes to how they conduct their work, despite Metsola’s promise in December that there would be “no business as usual,” which she repeated in July.  

    The limited ambition reflects an argument — pushed by a powerful subset of MEPs, primarily in Metsola’s large, center-right European People’s Party group — that changing that “business as usual” will only tie the hands of innocent politicians while doing little to stop the few with criminal intent. They’re bolstered by the fact that the Socialists & Democrats remain the only group touched by the scandal.

    “There were voices in this house who said, ‘Do nothing, these things will always happen, things are fine as they are,’” Metsola said. Some of the changes, she said, had been “resisted for decades” before Qatargate momentum pushed them through. 

    The Parliament already has some of the Continent’s highest standards for legislative bodies, said Rainer Wieland, a long-serving EPP member from Germany who sits on the several key rule-making committees: “I don’t think anyone can hold a candle to us.”

    MEP Rainer Wieland holds lots of sway over the reforms | Patrick Seeger/EFE via EPA

    Those who are still complaining, he added in a debate last week, “are living in wonderland.”

    Wieland holds lots of sway over the reforms. He chairs an internal working group on the Parliament’s rules that feeds into the Parliament’s powerful Committee on Constitutional Affairs, where Metsola’s 14-point plan will be translated into cold, hard rules. 

    Those rule changes are expected to be adopted by the full Parliament in September. 

    The measures will boost existing transparency rules significantly. The lead MEP on a legislative file will soon have to declare (and deal with) potential conflicts of interest, including those coming from their “emotional life.” And more MEPs will have to publish their meetings related to parliamentary business, including those with representatives from outside the EU. 

    Members will also have to disclose outside income over €5,000 — with additional details about the sector if they work in something like law or consulting. 

    Negotiators also agreed to double potential penalties for breaches: MEPs can lose their daily allowance and be barred from most parliamentary work for up to 60 days. 

    Yet the Parliament’s track record punishing MEPs who break the rules is virtually nonexistent.

    As it stands, an internal advisory committee can recommend a punishment, but it’s up to the president to impose it. Of 26 breaches of transparency rules identified over the years, not one MEP has been punished. (Metsola has imposed penalties for things like harassment and hate speech.) 

    And hopes for an outside integrity cop to help with enforcement were dashed when a long-delayed Commission proposal for an EU-wide independent ethics body was scaled back. 

    Stymied by legal constraints and left-right divides within the Parliament, the Commission opted for suggesting a standards-setting panel that, at best, would pressure institutions into better policing their own rules.

    “I really hate listening to some, especially members of the European Parliament, who say that ‘Without having the ethics body, we cannot behave ethical[ly],’” Commission Vice President for Values and Transparency Věra Jourová lamented in June.

    Metsola, for her part, has pledged to adhere to the advisory committee’s recommendations going forward. But MEPs from across the political spectrum flagged the president’s complete discretion to mete out punishments as unsustainable.

    “The problem was not (and never really was) [so] much the details of the rules!!! But the enforcement,” French Green MEP Gwendoline Delbos-Corfield — who sits in the working group — wrote to POLITICO.

    Wieland, the German EPP member on the rule-making committees, presented the situation more matter-of-factly: Parliament had done what it said it would do.

    “We fully delivered” on Metsola’s plan, Wieland told POLITICO in an interview. “Not more than that.”

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    Eddy Wax and Sarah Wheaton

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  • ‘Nothing is impossible’: Morocco to make history against Germany

    ‘Nothing is impossible’: Morocco to make history against Germany

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    Morocco will become first Arab team to play at a Women’s World Cup when they take on Germany in Group H.

    When: Monday, July 24
    Where: Melbourne Rectangular Stadium, Melbourne
    Kickoff: 6:30pm local time (08:30 GMT)

    Months after the men’s groundbreaking run to the semi-finals in Qatar, Morocco’s women will make World Cup history of their own on Monday.

    When the Atlas Lionesses face two-time former champions Germany in Melbourne, they will be the first Arab team to play at a Women’s World Cup.

    Morocco’s women enjoyed a surprise run to the final of last year’s Africa Cup of Nations, which they hosted, before losing 2-1 to South Africa in front of some 50,000 spectators in Rabat.

    At 72nd place, they are one of the lowest-ranked teams in Australia and New Zealand and it would be a surprise if they qualify from the group, but captain Ghizlane Chebbak knows the men have raised expectations.

    “Moroccan fans have that passion, as do us players, and we will give everything to make them satisfied,” she told FIFA.com.

    “The men have shown us that nothing is impossible if you fight for it and you stay focused,” she added.

    Meanwhile, second-ranked Germany are aiming to win their third Women’s World Cup title and first since 2007.

    Germany’s coach Martina Voss-Tecklenburg expects a difficult group stage at the tournament, with South Korea and Colombia also featuring in Group H, but still has the title as her main goal.

    “But there’s no guarantee of that. That was evident in the tournament opener: two games decided by details. It will be the same for us, already in the group stage,” she said.

    INTERACTIVE - Womens World Cup-groups-qualified-2023-1689241967

    Germany team news

    Germany are set to start their Women’s World Cup campaign without key players Lena Oberdorf and Marina Hegering due to injury. They are likely to be replaced by Chelsea players Sjoeke Nuesken and Melanie Leupolz.

    Morocco team news

    Morocco have not announced any absences.

    Form and FIFA world rankings

    Germany (ranked second): D W L W L

    Morocco (ranked 72nd): L L D D L

    Head to head

    It will be the first-ever game between Germany and Morocco.

    Players to watch

    Germany: Captain and goal machine Alexandra Popp is one of the biggest stars in German sport having won every prize at club level, including two Champions Leagues with Wolfsburg. Despite injury setbacks, Popp has scored 62 goals in 128 appearances for Germany.

    Morocco: Star striker Rosella Ayane scored the penalty that clinched the World Cup spot. She opted to play for her father’s home country rather than England and scored seven goals in her first 15 international matches.

    Where to watch the game?

    Global listings are available from livesoccertv.com.

    You can also follow our live blog on the match day.

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  • The planet’s burning. Can the Global South save it?

    The planet’s burning. Can the Global South save it?

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    Climate change headlines are rarely positive, but even against that yardstick, the World Meteorological Organization’s (WMO) latest global warming predictions unveiled in mid-May marked a poignant moment for human civilisation.

    In the next five years, the WMO warned, the world is likely to see an increase of more than 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) of warming over average pre-industrial levels for the first time.

    While the weather events forecast by the United Nations’s weather body capture outlier spikes in temperatures, they serve as ominous portents of just how hard it will be for the world to achieve its hope of limiting the average temperature increase to 1.5C by 2100.

    Yet, the warning signs have been around for a while and have been mounting.

    Barbeques are no longer the only smoky markers of the start of summer. Devastating wildfires, like the ones that ravaged Canada earlier this month, signal the onset of rising temperatures with deadly regularity. Meanwhile, cyclones like Biparjoy, which slammed into western India in mid-June, are wreaking havoc with increasing frequency.

    Eight years after global leaders gathered in a northeastern Paris suburb to seal the landmark 2015 climate agreement, no country is meeting the emissions cut goals needed to limit the global temperature rise to 1.5C, according to the independent research platform Climate Action Tracker.

    So is it all a lost cause? Or is there still hope? Are there any countries that are doing better than the rest in trying to mitigate the worst effects of climate change for future generations? And if so, what are they doing right?

    The short answer: Most developed countries are falling far behind their climate pledges. But some developing nations – such as The Gambia, Costa Rica, Morocco and Mali – are taking bold steps to fight a crisis that, though not of their making, often hits them the hardest.

    They are harnessing the power of the sun and innovating with agriculture in ways that serve as examples for others. But their journeys also reveal the limitations of how far they can wage this battle alone, without the Global North truly stepping up.

    The mangroves of the Gambia River in Serrekunda on September 26, 2021. The Gambia and parts of Senegal gained a 51 percent increase in mangrove cover between 1988 and 2018 [Leo Correa/AP]

    Gambian gambit

    Nfamara Dampha remembers his first brush with an extreme weather event as if it had happened yesterday.

    It was 1999 and 10-year-old Dampha stood with his parents and siblings on the verandah outside their house. A sudden torrent of rain caused by a thunderstorm – so intense that such phenomena are colloquially called “rain bombs” – had hit their village in The Gambia, the smallest country in mainland Africa. They were “too scared to be inside the house due to the uncertainty of whether its walls would survive or collapse”, Dampha said.

    The storm had ripped off the roofs of most houses around them; walls of buildings lay collapsed and fallen trees blocked the roads. Dampha’s house survived but the fence was destroyed. As he waded through the water the next morning, the scale of the devastation hit him even harder: furniture, mattresses, clothes and books floated along water-logged streets.

    Now a research scientist and senior climate change consultant at the World Bank, Dampha relived some of those memories when another rain bomb exploded on the West African country in July last year, affecting nearly 40 percent of the population and displacing thousands of people.

    Yet today, the country is on the front lines of not just the global climate crisis, but also efforts to combat its most devastating effects. Dampha created a Household Disaster Resilience Project (HELP-Gambia) in 2017 to gather financial resources to support local resilience efforts such as climate change awareness, adapting agricultural practices to survive the growing vagaries of weather patterns and supporting green businesses, specifically for the most vulnerable communities in The Gambia.

    His initiative is one among a series of similar climate-driven local movements across the country that have collectively turned the West African nation into a rare success story in the global fightback against climate change. In 2021, The Gambia was the only country in the world briefly on track to meet its Paris climate change commitments.

    Central to The Gambia’s strategy is the concept of agroforestry. Traditionally, agriculture and forests have often been viewed as competitors for land, with increased food demands leading to deforestation. Agroforestry, on the other hand, involves land use practices in which trees and forests coexist. The county unveiled a national agroforestry strategy in 2022 that set the target of restoring 7,000 hectares (17,300 acres) of degraded forests in a decade.

    This builds on longstanding reforestation efforts that saw The Gambia regain 6.6 percent of its forest cover between 1990 and 2005. Research also suggests a 51 percent increase in mangrove cover – which helps curb erosion and reduce the intensity of floods – across The Gambia and parts of Senegal between 1988 and 2018. All of this is aimed at cutting the country’s net carbon emissions to net zero by 2050.

    As the rain bombs have shown and as the nation’s long-term strategy document says: “The Gambia has no choice.”

    A thermosolar power plant is pictured at Noor II Ouarzazate, Morocco, November 4, 2016. Picture taken November 4, 2016. REUTERS/Youssef Boudlal
    A thermosolar power plant at Noor II Ouarzazate, Morocco, November 4, 2016. Morocco is increasingly supplying solar power to Europe [Youssef Boudla/Reuters]

    Power of the sun

    To the east of The Gambia, much-bigger and landlocked Mali has a power crisis: 83 percent of its population lacks access to electricity.

    Until recently, the country’s solution lay in decentralised diesel-powered mini-grids – sets of small electricity generators – to supply rural areas. Now, it is converting those into small solar grids.

    It has already deployed one such system, with support and a $9m loan from the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) and the Abu Dhabi Fund for Development (ADFD). The 4MW solar mini-grid system is designed to supply clean energy to 123,000 people across 32 villages. It could help Mali cut total carbon dioxide emissions by 5,000 tonnes – a thousand such mini-grids could almost wipe out the country’s carbon footprint.

    And this project is part of a broader trend. Between 2010 and 2019, Mali doubled the number of people connected to renewable mini-grids using solar, hydro and biogas technologies, reaching 11 million people – or more than half the country’s population – in 2019. If these grids now serve up the power they can, the county could dramatically reduce its energy access problem.

    But that is not all. Tania Martha Thomas, a researcher at the Paris-based Climate Chance Observatory, an international group that monitors trends on climate and biodiversity, said these solar mini-grids – which store electricity in batteries for local use – save thousands of women hours of labour. They would previously need to travel long distances to collect water, which can now be pumped using electricity.

    Further north, Morocco is leading a North African solar revolution that could serve not just the region’s energy needs but also those of Europe across the Mediterranean at a time when Russia’s war in Ukraine has disrupted oil and gas supplies.

    Morocco’s giant solar farms already export electricity to Spain through two undersea cables. But last year, as  the war in Ukraine intensified, the country struck a deal with the European Union to ramp up exports further. The biggest of the new projects on the horizon involves laying what will be the world’s longest high-voltage submarine cables, taking solar power from Morocco’s Sahara desert past Portugal, Spain and France all the way to the United Kingdom. The target is to provide up to 8 percent of the UK’s total energy needs by 2030.

    Egypt and Tunisia are also hoping to export solar power to Europe.

    Yet, if the world is to truly neutralise global warming, it will need more than the export of energy. It will need countries to learn how to turn things around from the brink of disaster.

    Costa Rica, a tiny country in Central America, could offer valuable lessons.

    A frog named "rana azul" or "rana de cafetal" (Agalychnis annae) climbs a branch in a protected forest on the outskirts of San Jose, Costa Rica, Wednesday, Aug. 24, 2022. Costa Rica went from having one of the world's highest deforestation rates in the 1980s to a nation centered on ecotourism, luring world travelers with the possibility of moving between marine reserves and cloud forest in a single day. (AP Photo/Moises Castillo)
    A frog climbs a branch in a protected forest on the outskirts of San Jose, Costa Rica, Wednesday, August 24, 2022. Costa Rica went from having one of the world’s highest deforestation rates in the 1980s to being a nation centred on ecotourism, luring world travellers [Moises Castillo/AP Photo]

    Green beacon of hope

    Today, Costa Rica routinely ranks among the world’s greenest countries.

    That wasn’t always the case. In the 1940s, three-fourths of the country was covered in rainforests before loggers ravaged the landscape, using trees to mint their fortunes. By 1987, forest cover was down to only 21 percent.

    “It’s a super bio-diverse country that used to be a poster child for environmental destruction,” Stanford University researcher Kelley Langhans told Al Jazeera.

    Over the past 35 years, she said, the country has adopted “a suite of innovative conservation finance and policy mechanisms” that have today made it a role model among environmental policymakers – giving it a reputation very different from the one it had until the 1980s.

    More than half the country is now once again lush with forests. Costa Rica is one of only nine countries – Morocco and The Gambia are also on this list – whose steps to mitigate climate change are “almost sufficient”, according to Climate Action Tracker.

    Under a key policy that has helped with this dramatic turnaround, Costa Rica pays communities and landowners that preserve the environment, including its tree cover, biodiversity and water cleanliness. This initiative is funded by taxes collected on fossil fuels.

    The country has relied almost entirely on renewable energy since 2014. More than 7 percent of all passenger vehicles are electric, higher than in the US, Canada and the rest of Latin America. Electric vehicles are exempt from taxes and import duties, and owners have a range of other benefits – including free parking in designated spots as well as a waiver on annual road permit payments.

    That impressive track record made Langhans and her colleagues decide to study whether Costa Rica could implement its reforestation strategy even better.

    “We know that Costa Rica is interested in reforestation, so we wanted to know how, given limited land and money to achieve conservation goals, the country might be able to target reforestation to areas where it could provide people and ecosystems with the largest benefits,” she said.

    She and her team found that reforesting an area 10 metres (33 feet) wide along the banks of Costa Rica’s rivers – which would roughly be equivalent to 1 percent of the country’s total land area – could significantly improve water quality by reducing sedimentation as well as nitrogen and phosphorus pollution. It would also assist carbon sequestration efforts – capturing carbon from the atmosphere.

    These gains could be further amplified, the researchers found, if these reforestation efforts are concentrated in areas where people depend on rivers for drinking water.

    But if showing success against climate change is hard, maintaining it is even harder – as The Gambia is learning.

    FILE - Somalis who fled drought-stricken areas carry their belongings as they arrive at a makeshift camp for the displaced on the outskirts of Mogadishu, Somalia, June 30, 2022. Tens of millions of people are being uprooted by natural disasters due to the impact of climate change, though the world has yet to fully recognize climate migrants or come up with a formalized mechanism to assess their needs and help them. (AP Photo/Farah Abdi Warsameh, File)
    Somalis who fled drought-stricken areas carry their belongings as they arrive at a makeshift camp for the displaced on the outskirts of Mogadishu, Somalia, June 30, 2022 [Farah Abdi Warsameh/AP]

    Can’t do it alone

    Burdened with ever-increasing development needs, which are in turn exacerbated by extreme weather events, many developing nations are struggling to meet their climate goals alone.

    Soon after The Gambia drew global headlines as the only country whose plans to combat climate change were considered compatible with the goals set in the 2015 Paris Agreement, Climate Action Tracker downgraded it a notch, to “almost sufficient.” This was after the country submitted its updated Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) plan – its blueprint to reduce carbon emissions.

    Such plans have two components. One lays out what the country can do on its own, while the other outlines the steps the country wants to take – but that depends on international support. According to Climate Action Tracker, while The Gambia’s domestic efforts are still on track to meet Paris targets, it is falling behind on plans that need global help.

    As the developed world is yet to meet its promise of $100bn annually in climate financing to developing nations – even for a single year since the 2009 pledge – the World Bank now estimates that $1 trillion will be needed each year for mitigation and adaptation.

    Meanwhile, countries like The Gambia must fight crises in the present while preparing for the future.

    The World Bank’s Dampha was previously the director of administration at The Gambia’s National Disaster Management Agency, where he saw closely how extreme weather events kill people, destroy livelihoods and leave behind a trail of destruction.

    A 2020 study by Dampha concluded that most people leaving the country’s island capital city of Banjul are climate migrants.

    “Earlier studies revealed that our capital city Banjul will be underwater by 2100 if the world’s mean sea level rises by just a metre,” he said. “If current conditions remain the same, Banjul’s loss to sea level rise could result in a total governance or state failure.”

    Banjul is not just The Gambia’s administrative centre but also its economic hub.

    During the COP27 conference in Egypt last year, countries agreed to a new fund to cover loss and damage suffered by vulnerable countries affected by climate disasters. Following the announcement of this new fund, African “expectations are high in view of the magnitude of the stakes around climate change”, said Mélaine Assè-Wassa Sama, a climate action project officer at Climate Chance Observatory.

    Research suggests that in sub-Sarah Africa, as many as 86 million people could be displaced by climate change within their own countries by 2050, and 19 million in North Africa. Cyclone Freddy, which hit Southern Africa in March 2023, forced nearly 660,000 people in Malawi to move.

    Without outside help, Sama told Al Jazeera, vulnerable African countries will struggle to fight against the effects of climate change for which they have little historical responsibility – no matter how hard they try with their limited domestic resources.

    Dampha agreed. Currently, international financial support is negligible. “The estimated cost of the July 2022 rainfall event was more than the total climate finance received by The Gambia in 2018,” he said.

    “Climate reparation or financing is not development aid or charity to those disproportionately impacted by the climate catastrophe,” Dampha said. “It is our moral obligation.”

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  • Morocco joins Portugal and Spain in transcontinental bid to host 2030 World Cup | CNN

    Morocco joins Portugal and Spain in transcontinental bid to host 2030 World Cup | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    Morocco is set to join Spain and Portugal in a bid to host the FIFA 2030 Men’s World Cup, apparently replacing Ukraine in a three-way alliance with the two European nations.

    Ukraine said it would team up with Spain and Portugal in a joint bid last October, but Morocco’s announcement suggests it will no longer be part of the process. CNN has reached out to all the nations involved.

    Morocco’s sport minister Chakib Benmoussa unveiled details of the North African nation’s bid Tuesday, citing a letter from Morocco’s King Mohammed VI.

    “I would like to announce that the Kingdom of Morocco has decided, together with Spain and Portugal, to present a joint bid to host the 2030 World Cup,” he read from the letter, according to Reuters.

    Speaking at the Confederation of African Football President’s Outstanding Achievement Awards in Kigali, Rwanda, Benmoussa called the bid “unprecedented in football history.”

    It will “bring together Africa and Europe, the northern and southern Mediterranean, and the African, Arab and Euro-Mediterranean worlds,” he said. “It will also bring out the best in all of us – in effect a combination of genius, creativity, experience and means.”

    The new alliance adds another transcontinental bid to the process, alongside a three-way deal between Greece, Saudi Arabia and Egypt and a separate joint bid from Uruguay, Argentina, Paraguay and Chile.

    Countries teaming up to hold the World Cup is not unprecedented, with Canada, America and Mexico due to co-host the World Cup in 2026. Japan also collaborated with South Korea in staging the 2002 chapter.

    Morocco’s announcement comes on the heels of its historic performance at the 2022 World Cup.

    The Atlas Lions, the nickname of Morocco’s national team, defeated both Spain and Portugal in the knockout stages in Qatar on their way to becoming the first African and first Arab country to ever reach a World Cup semifinal.

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  • Meet the Wydad ultras, the Moroccan team’s ‘first player’

    Meet the Wydad ultras, the Moroccan team’s ‘first player’

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    As Morocco hosts the FIFA Club World Cup, members of the Winners 2005 fan group describe their football club as ‘source of hope, life’.

    Casablanca, Morocco – In the old town of Casablanca, tags and murals reflecting football club Wydad AC’s past and present can be found everywhere.

    The team’s die-hard fans are renowned as some of the most passionate and organised globally, famous for their “tifo”: choreographed displays of support involving huge banners and flags.

    These supporters have been gearing up to cheer on this year’s African Champions League winners, who will take on Saudi Arabia’s Al Hilal on Saturday in the second round of the FIFA Club World Cup that began this week in Morocco.

    “We are ‘ultras’,” a member of the Winners 2005 fan group, who did not want to share their name, tells me.

    “It’s our job to represent the club.”

    Wydad fans supporting their team [File: Fadel Senna/AFP]

    The name Winners 2005 reflects the year when the so-called “ultras” culture became popular in Morocco. The term “ultra” was first used in Italy but is now associated with any fanatical group of supporters.

    Despite being relatively young and mostly students, the members of Winners 2005 are filled with a deep sense of the club’s decades-old history and what it means to be a Wydad fan.

    “This team is about resistance,” another supporter said. “Resistance and nationalism. Our grandparents fought to make this club. We carry on that fight.”

    It is Wydad’s origin story that informs the feelings the team inspires in its supporters.

    During French occupation, access to sports facilities in Morocco was limited so some in the country decided in the mid-1930s to form their own club. Wydad Athletic Club began as a water-polo team but quickly grew to include football. The side went on to become a symbol of the nationalist movement whenever they played.

    “Wydad is a source of hope, a source of life,” said Mohamed Zahnoun, a Wydad fan who has been watching the team for more than 50 years.

    “It gives me a vision of a beautiful world; it’s how I breathe, how I forget my problems,” he added.

    “After a week of work, I get to go on an adventure with my love. It’s a love that can only be understood by those who have grown up with the club.”

    FIFA Club World Cup Match Schedule

    When I suggested to another supporter, Mohammed Kiddi, that the fans are Wydad’s 12th player, his response was one of laughter.

    “Not the 12th – no, no, no,” he said. “We are the first.”

    Wydad are Morocco’s most successful side, with 22 league titles to their name, but this is only their second appearance at the Club World Cup.

    The 19th edition of the tournament brings together the respective champions of each of FIFA’s six premier regional competitions, alongside the host nation’s league champions.

    In addition to Wydad and Al Hilal, the teams participating this year are Flamengo (Brazil); Al Ahly (Egypt); Auckland City (New Zealand); Real Madrid (Spain); and Seattle Sounders (United States).

    “We are the champions of Africa and we fear no one,” said Kiddi, before the Al Hilal encounter.

    “Playing in Morocco gives us a big advantage. It won’t just be Wydad fans supporting the team but the whole of the country.”

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  • Spain, Morocco seek reset of testy relationship at Rabat summit

    Spain, Morocco seek reset of testy relationship at Rabat summit

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    Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez says Spain and Morocco have agreed to set aside their differences as they seek to repair a relationship marked by frequent disputes over migration and territory.

    Sanchez was speaking on Thursday at a summit in Rabat where the two countries signed about 20 agreements to boost trade and investment, including credit lines of up to 800 million euros.

    “We have agreed on a commitment to mutual respect, whereby in our discourse and in our political practice we will avoid everything that we know offends the other party, especially regarding our respective spheres of sovereignty,” Sanchez said.

    There have been regular diplomatic crises over Spain’s enclaves in North Africa, Morocco’s dispute with rebels over the Western Sahara region, and the arrival of refugees and migrants in Spain each year through Morocco.

    Morocco refuses to recognise Spanish sovereignty over the enclaves Ceuta and Melilla but, last year, the two countries agreed to open the first customs control point at Ceuta.

    Madrid says that reflects Rabat’s recognition of the enclaves as foreign territory but Morocco has made no public statement indicating that its long-held stance that the enclaves should be part of its territory has changed.

    Sanchez restored cordial relations with Rabat in March 2022 after he reversed Spain’s policy on the disputed territory of Western Sahara by backing Morocco’s proposal to create an autonomous region. The Algeria-backed breakaway movement Polisario Front seeks to establish an independent state in the region.

    Yasmine Hasnaoui, a North Africa specialist at the Institute of Saharan Studies Al Andalous, told Al Jazeera that Sanchez’s visit to Rabat marked a reset of relations with Morocco.

    “The visit of the Spanish government to Morocco is ushering a new era thanks to a clear-cut roadmap after Spain unequivocally acknowledged the historical sovereignty of Morocco over its territory in the Western Sahara through the autonomy plan,” she said.

    “The Spanish prime minister has reiterated today that [in] this new phase of bilateral relations with Morocco, [it] is considered an important partner with the EU in fighting extremism, terrorism and aiding the bloc’s migration policy.”

    As the third largest destination for Spanish exports around the world, Hasnaoui said Spain also sees Morocco as a strategic economic partner.

    “Spain has become aware that its profit is not only found in Europe but rather its interests are largely found in Morocco and the south in general,” she added.

    But forging better relations between the neighbours has forced members of Sanchez’s Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party into some uncomfortable positions.

    Last month, its MEPs voted against a resolution in the European Parliament to call on Morocco to improve its record on press freedom. MEP Juan Fernando Lopez said this week that maintaining cordial neighbourly relations sometimes involved “swallowing a toad”.

    Tensions with Algeria

    Madrid’s about-turn on Western Sahara drew the ire of Algeria, a Polisario Front ally, which suspended trade with Spain and warned it could cut the flow of natural gas to Spain even as it forges closer gas ties with Italy.

    Spanish exports to Algeria fell by 41 percent to 1 billion euros in the January-November 2022 period compared with a year earlier, according to the Ministry of Industry. Its exports to Morocco rose by 27 percent to 10.8 billion euros in the same period.

    Spain expects to get a significant chunk of the 45 billion euros that Morocco is expected to invest by 2050 in improving infrastructure, a Spanish government source said.

    Spanish companies are well positioned to win concessions in key sectors of Rabat’s development plan, such as in water sanitation and renewable energy, the person said.

    State-owned railway operators Renfe and Adif are working with their Moroccan counterpart to develop new train lines, which could mean 6 billion euros of business.

    Spain is discussing how to remove Morocco from a grey list of money laundering countries, another government source said.

    A delegation from the Financial Action Task Force, a Paris-based global money laundering and terrorist financing watchdog, visited Morocco last month and is expected to announce later this month its decision on whether Morocco can be removed from the list.

    In Rabat on Thursday, Moroccan Prime Minister Aziz Akhannouch expressed satisfaction at Spain’s support for Morocco’s autonomy plan as the “most credible solution” to resolve the Western Sahara dispute, but did not reference an agreement to set aside all sovereignty disputes.

    A joint declaration made no mention of Spain’s enclaves in Morocco, although it reiterated Spain’s new position on Western Sahara.

    Morocco said it expected Spain’s upcoming presidency of the European Union would mean it could act as a conduit for better relations with the bloc.

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  • Morocco’s big moment: The Club World Cup might be an afterthought for Europe, but it’s the Holy Grail for the rest of the world | CNN

    Morocco’s big moment: The Club World Cup might be an afterthought for Europe, but it’s the Holy Grail for the rest of the world | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    Less than six weeks after the national team’s remarkable performance at the World Cup, Morocco finds itself at the center of world soccer as it hosts the FIFA Club World Cup.

    Since 2005 the Club World Cup has been held annually, featuring the six winners of each continent’s equivalent to Europe’s Champions League tournament, plus an additional club from the host nation.

    Over the last decade, European teams have dominated the tournament, last losing a match when Brazilian club Corinthians beat Chelsea in the 2012 final. Fourteen-time European Cup winner Real Madrid will enter the 2023 competition as heavy favorites.

    Unlike the World Cup where there is a group stage, the clubs play a straight knockout tournament with the caveat that various continents qualify for different stages of the tournament.

    The champion of Oceania plays the host club in the first round. The winner is then drawn with the champions of Africa, Asia and North America in two knockout games. The winner of each game then plays the European and South American champions in the semifinals.

    Because Wydad Casablanca is both the champion of Morocco and Africa, the role of “host” passes to Egyptian club Al Ahly who lost to the Moroccan team in the final of the African Champions League in May.

    Wydad enters the tournament at the quarterfinal stage, playing against Al Hilal of Saudi Arabia with South American champion Flamengo waiting in the semifinals.

    Hunting a record fifth title, Real Madrid also enters at the semifinal stage and will face either New Zealand club Auckland City, Al Ahly, or the Seattle Sounders – the first ever US club to play in the Club World Cup.

    No African club has ever won the Club World Cup, but Wydad fan Mohamed Berrada is confident that in a tournament on home soil, the team can channel the success of its history-making national side – and perhaps even lift the trophy.

    “We had a very good World Cup with the national team in Qatar,” Berrada tells CNN Sports. “Everybody is talking about us, and we know that we will be very followed in this Club World Cup.”

    Expectations are high for the club with tickets for Wydad’s first match against Al Hilal selling out in under two hours as fans from Casablanca will make the one hour journey to Rabat’s 53,000 capacity Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium.

    Fans who regularly watch the English Premier League, La Liga, and the UEFA Champions League could be forgiven for asking the question: who cares about the Club World Cup? The European teams nearly always win, it adds extra fixtures to an already busy calendar, and fans have to watch their team play in far-flung countries.

    That sentiment is shared by some players. Manchester United great Paul Scholes once said on BBC Radio Five Live that the Club World Cup was less important to him than his local badminton tournament.

    But take a step outside Europe and the perception of the competition is very different.

    Flamengo fan João Paulo still views his team’s 3-0 triumph over Liverpool in 1981 in the Intercontinental Cup – a precursor to the Club World Cup – as the greatest moment in the club’s history.

    Despite Europe’s dominance in the tournament, it is still taken just as seriously in Brazil as it was 40 years ago.

    In 1981 Paulo listened to the match against Liverpool on the radio; in 2019, he made the trip to Qatar where Flamengo lost against the same opponent, and this year he is one of thousands of Flamengo fans making the trip to Morocco.

    Flamengo's Zico takes on Liverpool's  Ray Kennedy, Graeme Souness and Alan Hansen.

    “I believe that for us, for Brazilian and for South American supporters, winning the [Club] World Cup is something incredible. It’s amazing,” he tells CNN Sports.

    “If we win this or if any team from South America can win this, this would be something that would change your life as a supporter.”

    It’s a sentiment is not limited to South America.

    Pitso Mosimane, who took Egyptian giants Al Ahly to back-to-back bronze medals in 2020 and 2021 and is arguably Africa’s greatest coach in the modern era, says the Club World Cup was the “highlight” of his career.

    “It’s the pinnacle of any club coach,” he tells CNN Sport.s “What’s the biggest tournament you want to play? Some would say the Champions League, but the Champions League leads you to the Club World Cup.”

    For Mosimane and others, the Club World Cup is the one chance that players, coaches, and fans get to test themselves against the very best.

    And even in a format that Mosimane says loads the dice in favour of Europeans and South American teams by allowing them to enter at the semifinals, the Club World Cup is the opportunity for fans of the Sounders, Al Ahly, Wydad and even Auckland City to earn the respect that Real Madrid has by dint of its geography.

    Those “loaded dice” are potentially on their last roll as Morocco’s tournament is the final Club World Cup to be held in its current format.

    Perhaps lost amidst the hysteria of Lionel Messi winning his first World Cup title was the announcement made by FIFA president Gianni Infantino that the Club World Cup would be turned into a 32-team tournament played every four years, starting in 2025.

    It is recognition from the head of world soccer that the tournament has not drawn the interest that the concept warrants.

    With the tournament falling at the same time as the major leagues in Europe and just a few weeks ahead of the resumption of the Champions League, FIFA has recognized that it needs to both expand the tournament and find a time that does not clash with major club soccer.

    Soccer’s global governing body has not provided any information on the format of the tournament beyond the number of participants, but the announcement has caused quite a stir, particularly in Europe.

    The Seattle Sounders will be the first team from the US to play at the Club World Cup after beating Pumas UNAM in the CONCACAF Champions League final.

    The Premier League maintains its position that it is, “committed to preventing any radical changes to the post-2024 FIFA international match calendar that would adversely affect player welfare and threaten the competitiveness, calendar, structures and traditions of domestic football.”

    FIFPRO, the global player’s union, said that the tournament could have “serious consequences for and aggravate pressure on the welfare and employment of players.”

    However, Infantino’s idea has traction outside of Europe.

    “We would love to see our team playing against more and more international teams,” says Berrada.

    Moroccan journalist Amine El Amri agrees, bemoaning the “frustrating” model of the tournament now that gives the Europeans and South Americans an advantage over the other continents.

    He tells CNN Sports: “I think it’s just so enchanting for the people of those countries to have their countries in a [Club] World Cup.”

    Even in an expanded format, European clubs would arrive as heavy favorites and there are very real concerns about player welfare as the global soccer calendar mercilessly fills up.

    But for those outside of Europe, an expanded Club World Cup, if organized properly, is a potential opportunity for those seen as second-class clubs to take their place alongside European clubs at the top table of world soccer.

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  • Spain: no evidence of criminal misconduct in migrant deaths

    Spain: no evidence of criminal misconduct in migrant deaths

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    MADRID — Spanish prosecutors have dropped their investigation into the deaths of more than 20 migrants last June at the border between Morocco and the Spanish enclave city of Melilla, saying in a statement Friday they found no evidence of criminal misconduct by Spanish security forces.

    Prosecutors said they spent six months investigating what happened when hundreds of migrants — some estimates say around 2,000 — stormed the Melilla border fence in northwest Africa from the Moroccan side in an attempt to reach European soil. At least 23 migrants were officially reported dead, though human rights groups say the number was higher.

    The Spanish prosecutors said “it cannot be concluded that the conduct of the (Spanish) security officers involved increased the threat to the life and wellbeing of the immigrants, so no charge of reckless homicide can be brought.”

    The migrants were “hostile and violent,” the prosecutors’ statement said.

    Hundreds of men, some wielding sticks, climbed over the fence from Moroccan territory and were corralled into a border crossing area. When they managed to break through the gate to the Spanish side, a stampede apparently led to the crushing of many people.

    Moroccan police launched tear gas and beat men with batons, even when some were prone on the ground. Spanish guards surrounded a group that managed to get through before apparently sending them back.

    The clash ended with African men, clearly injured or even dead, piled on top of one another while Moroccan police in riot gear looked on.

    The Spanish prosecutors said that “at no point did (Spanish) security officers have reason to believe that there were people at risk who required help.”

    However, the prosecutors faulted some security officers who threw rocks at the immigrants, recommending disciplinary procedures against them.

    Amnesty International said earlier this month that the handling of the investigation by Spain and Morocco, which has remained mostly silent on the matter, “smacks of a cover-up and racism.”

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  • The Moroccan spy at the heart of the Qatar investigation

    The Moroccan spy at the heart of the Qatar investigation

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    Press play to listen to this article

    Voiced by artificial intelligence.

    PARIS — A Moroccan secret service agent, identified as Mohamed Belahrech, has emerged as one of the key operators in the Qatar corruption scandal that has shaken the foundations of the European Parliament. His codename is M118, and he’s been running circles around European spy agencies for years.

    Belahrech seems at the center of an intricate web that extends from Qatar and Morocco to Italy, Poland and Belgium. He is suspected of having been engaged in intense lobbying efforts and alleged corruption targeting European MEPs in recent years. And it turns out he’s been known to European intelligence services for some time.

    Rabat is increasingly in the spotlight, as focus widens beyond the role of Qatar in the corruption allegations of European MEPs, which saw Belgian police seizing equipment and more than €1.5 million in cash in raids across at least 20 homes and offices. 

    Belgian Justice Minister Vincent Van Quickenborne last week provided a scarcely veiled indication that Morocco was involved in the probe. Speaking to Belgian lawmakers, he referred to “a country that in recent years has already been mentioned … when it comes to interference.” This is understood to refer to Morocco, since Rabat’s security service has been accused of espionage in Belgium, where there is a large diaspora of Moroccans.

    According to Italian daily La Repubblica and the Belgian Le Soir, Belahrech is one of the links connecting former MEP Pier Antonio Panzeri to the Moroccan secret service, the DGED. The Italian politician Panzeri is now in jail, facing preliminary charges of corruption in the investigation as to whether Morocco and Qatar bought influence in the European Parliament. 

    In a cache of Moroccan diplomatic cables leaked by a hacker in 2014 and 2015 (and seen by POLITICO), Panzeri is described as “a close friend” of Morocco, “an influential ally” who is “capable of fighting the growing activism of our enemies at the European Parliament.”

    Investigators are now looking at just how close a friend Panzeri was to Morocco. The Belgian extradition request for Panzeri’s wife and daughter, who are also allegedly involved in the corruption scandal, mentions “gifts” from Abderrahim Atmoun, Morocco’s ambassador to Warsaw. 

    For several years, Panzeri shared the presidency of the joint EU-Morocco parliamentary committee with Atmoun, a seasoned diplomat keen on promoting Morocco’s interests in the Brussels bubble.

    But it’s now suspected that Atmoun was taking orders from Belahrech, who is “a dangerous man,” an official with knowledge of the investigation said to Le Soir. It’s under Belahrech’s watch that Panzeri reportedly sealed his association with Morocco’s DGED after failing to get reelected to the Parliament in 2019. 

    Belharech may also be the key to unraveling one of the lingering mysteries of the Qatar scandal: the money trail. A Belgian extradition request seen by POLITICO refers to an enigmatic character linked to a credit card given to Panzeri’s relatives — who is known as “the giant.” Speculation is swirling as to whether Belahrech could be this giant.

    The many lives of a Moroccan spy

    Belahrech is no newbie in European spy circles — media reports trace his presence back to several espionage cases over the past decade.

    The man from Rabat first caught the authorities’ attention in connection to alleged infiltration of Spanish mosques, which in 2013 resulted in the deportation of the Moroccan director of an Islamic organization in Catalonia, according to Spanish daily El Confidencial.

    Belahrech was allegedly in charge of running agents in the mosques at the behest of the DGED, while his wife was suspected of money laundering via a Spain-based travel agency. The network was dismantled in 2015, according to El Mundo

    Not long after, Belahrech reemerged in France, where he played a leading role in a corruption case at Orly airport in Paris. 

    A Moroccan agent, identified at the time as Mohamed B., allegedly obtained up to 200 confidential files on terrorism suspects in France from a French border officer, according to an investigation published in Libération

    The officer, who was detained and put under formal investigation in 2017, allegedly provided confidential material regarding individuals on terrorist watchlists — and possible people of interest transiting through the airport — to the Moroccan agent in exchange for four-star holidays in Morocco. 

    French authorities reportedly did not press charges against Belahrech, who disappeared when his network was busted. According to a French official with knowledge of the investigation, Belahrech was cooperating with France at the time by providing intelligence on counterterrorism matters, and was let off for this reason.

    Moroccan secret service agents may act as intelligence providers for European agencies while simultaneously coordinating influence operations in those same countries, two people familiar with intelligence services coordination told POLITICO. For that reason, European countries sometimes turn a blind eye to practices that could be qualified as interference, they added, so long as this remains unobtrusive.

    Contacted, the intelligence services of France, Spain and Morocco did not immediately reply to a request for comment.

    As to Belahrech: Five years after his foray in France, the mysterious M118 is back in the spotlight — raising questions over his ongoing relationship with European intelligence networks.

    Hannah Roberts contributed to reporting.

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  • Insignificant World Cup playoff? Moroccans think otherwise

    Insignificant World Cup playoff? Moroccans think otherwise

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    Doha, Qatar – It is the first of the three Ms in action on the penultimate day of World Cup 2022, the one that the world, football fans and those plotting the moves up there least expected to still be among the call-outs.

    Messi and Mbappe can wait. Morocco will be taking centre stage on Saturday, hoping to finish the fairytale run in Qatar with achievements unprecedented.

    Morocco will take on Croatia at Khalifa International Stadium in the third-place playoff at Qatar 2022.

    Croatia failed to match, or better, their 2018 outing where they lost in the final to France.

    Morocco, meanwhile, have reached unprecedented heights, won millions of hearts and gained followers more rapidly than a new pop sensation on Instagram in the historical run to the last four.

    For a team that was not used to winning much, especially at a World Cup, the sight of downing Belgium, Canada, Spain and Portugal gave its followers hope.

    Moroccan players were dejected after their loss to France in the semifinal [Sorin Furcoi/Al Jazeera]

    Since beating Belgium, Morocco hoped for a last-16 slot. Expectations grew when they beat Spain. Fantasy gave way to belief after beating Portugal. For a team that, at first, annoyed their opposition, then alarmed them, had finally left them aghast, gaining as much momentum as rolling down a hill as they eyed the final.

    Until they faced France. At Al Bayt Stadium on Wednesday, the dream did not materialise in the way Morocco wanted, perhaps due to the introduction of a new football, the occasion or just the gulf in skills between the two sets of players.

    Despite the heartbreak, Morocco fans are hoping for a winning end to their World Cup, one that has already been an extension of a dream of a lifetime.

    “Whatever happens now, it’ won’t take away from what they’ve done, they made history,” Omer, visiting Doha from Casablanca for the World Cup, told Al Jazeera.

    “It [the World Cup campaign] started with Croatia, it will end with Croatia. I hope we beat them this time [the group stage match ended 0-0]. I hope we finish well. But whatever happens, we’re super proud of the team; we’re fully behind them and we’re supporting them.”

    Morocco fans
    Morocco fans have enjoyed every minute of their team’s show at Qatar 2022 [Sorin Furcoi/Al Jazeera]

    A French masterclass on the pitch ensured the Atlas Lions will not finish higher than third in the World Cup. But they can take third, a final position that was unthinkable by most at the start of the tournament for the 22nd-ranked side.

    “Winning matters. The team didn’t make it to the final but it won’t give up,” Amine, also visiting Qatar from Morocco, said. “The team’s performance has changed mindsets everywhere. There’s a winning mentality now and it’s refreshing to see that. A win on Saturday will make a massive difference back home.”

    For Imane, a Moroccan living in Paris, a win on Saturday “holds a lot of meaning”.

    “It might not seem like much, but getting third place is actually important for us and it holds a lot of meaning because it shows that Morocco’s journey at the World Cup, as historical as it was, was not just luck but the result of the players’ effort and the supporters’ faith,” she said.

    “It does matter to me,” Ilham, a Moroccan citizen residing in Qatar, said. “I want to see them win third place. They deserve it. They’ve made us so happy and I want them to be happy.”

    For some, the loss against France failed to take the gloss off Morocco’s run to the last four where they became the first team from Africa to reach the semifinals of the World Cup.

    “This is football, that’s how it works,” Fatima, a Moroccan supporter, said after the 2-0 loss on Wednesday. “But we’re really proud of the team. Moroccan football has totally changed now. This is not a loss, no way. We are the champions.”

    morocco
    Morocco fans celebrating in the stands [Sorin Furcoi/Al Jazeera]

    Yasmina, a Qatar resident from Morocco, thinks winning third place would be “amazing and honourable”.

    “We’ve already won a lot during this World Cup: pride, unity, solidarity and momentum,” she said.

    “But I think the pressure is less and the stress is way smaller on Saturday. I’d love Morocco to beat Croatia but no matter what happens they are my champions.”

    With the amount of football, competitions and other happenings in life, most tend to forget the losing finalists of a World Cup let alone the team that finishes third. Losing a semifinal is shattering enough but to park away the memories and prepare for one more match, which will not allow you to relive your dreams, can be demanding for the mind and the body.

    For Moroccan fans though, a win on Saturday will be the year-end bonus that nobody had asked their bosses for.

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  • Croatia, Morocco target third-place medal at World Cup

    Croatia, Morocco target third-place medal at World Cup

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    December 15, 2022 GMT

    DOHA, Qatar (AP) — The chances of the winning the World Cup might have gone for Croatia and Morocco, but “immortality” is at stake when the two teams meet in Saturday’s third-place playoff.

    Croatia forward Andrej Kramarić dispelled the notion it would be a meaningless contest at Khalifa International Stadium.

    “I think if you ask this question to Moroccan players, I don’t think they will look that way,” he said at a news conference Thursday. “They’re fighting for their lives because if you win a medal at a World Cup you become an immortal hero in your country. That’s the same thing we are going to do.”

    Morocco defied the odds to become the first African team to reach the World Cup semifinals. But the Atlas Lions’ run came to an end with a 2-0 loss to defending champions France on Wednesday.

    Croatia reached the final in Russia in 2018, but suffered a 3-0 loss to Argentina on Tuesday.

    “Eight of us from (the tournament in) Russia understand that feeling of winning a medal at the World Cup and we have a lot of players who haven’t experienced that and would love to do that because it’s something that will stay with you for the rest of their life,” Kramaric said.

    ___

    James Robson is at https://twitter.com/jamesalanrobson

    ___

    AP World Cup coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/world-cup and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

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  • After World Cup success, Morocco has renewed aims to host

    After World Cup success, Morocco has renewed aims to host

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    DOHA, Qatar — The idea that Morocco could co-host the 2030 World Cup with near-neighbors Spain and Portugal seemed a bit crazy when it was floated four years ago.

    It doesn’t seem so crazy now.

    Morocco has gained status inside FIFA and credibility with fans by eliminating Spain and then Portugal in knockout games to be the first African team to advance to a World Cup semifinals.

    There are longer-term prospects for the national team with a solid foundation seemingly in place. There’s strong recruitment from the Moroccan diaspora in Europe, coupled with homegrown players nurtured at a world-class training center near Rabat.

    Though there is no proposal yet to create a first multicontinent World Cup hosting bid, the head of Morocco’s soccer federation still believes in the concept.

    “We wanted this organization to be shared between the African continent and the European continent,” Fouzi Lekjaa told The Associated Press in an interview at the team hotel this week.

    “In order to show the world that the relationship between Africa and Europe is not only the relationship of illegal immigration and the fight against it,” Lekjaa said. “Rather, it is a relationship in which civilizations can meet and cultures meet.”

    That Morocco and Spain are so geographically close — “We are only 14 kilometers (less than 10 miles) away” Lekjaa noted — is the core appeal of any joint bid as it was in 2018.

    So is the support of King Mohammed VI who immediately asked for a renewed World Cup bid when Morocco lost the 2026 tournament hosting vote to the heavily favored United States-Canada-Mexico plan. The latest in a streak of losing Morocco bids was a 134-65 vote by FIFA member federations in Moscow on the eve of the last World Cup.

    What has changed since 2018?

    Lekjaa, a government minister in charge of the state budget, now has more influence at FIFA as an African elected delegate on its ruling Council since joining last year. He is clearly in good graces with FIFA president Gianni Infantino given that holding a government job was once a barrier to candidates in order to avoid potential conflicts of interest.

    “Now we seek to be a key player in the international dimension within FIFA,” Lekjaa acknowledged.

    What seems possible in soccer politics also changed during the COVID-19 pandemic, with continental championships postponed plus hosts and scheduled dates changed at short notice.

    European soccer body UEFA was flatly opposed in 2018 to jointly bidding with another continent.

    Still, Europe and Africa combine to have 109 of the 211 FIFA voting members and there was clear politics involved in Ukraine joining the Spain-Portugal bid in October.

    FIFA has yet to specify a timetable and bid rules toward an expected hosting decision in 2024 for the 2030 tournament.

    Infantino also had talks with political leaders that fueled speculation of an unlikely three-continent bid anchored by Saudi Arabia and also including Egypt and Greece. By comparison, uniting Spain, Portugal and Morocco looks more logical.

    The 100-year anniversary of the World Cup is in 2030, and the original 1930 host, Uruguay, is jointly bidding for it with Argentina, Chile and Paraguay. The South American soccer body CONMEBOL has just 10 votes at FIFA.

    Morocco is also building influence in African soccer and winning admirers globally for the $65 million Mohammed VI Football Center, which is a training base for players, coaches, referees and officials.

    “Morocco’s policy has made us an important partner for all African countries. We are present in partnerships in money and business, and also in sports,” Lekjaa said.

    Under his leadership since 2014, the Moroccan federation tried to professionalize management at its clubs, install more natural grass pitches and create regional youth training bases.

    Casablanca-based team Wydad, coached by Walid Regragui, benefited from this strategy, winning Africa’s Champions League in May.

    Regragui was installed as the coach of Morocco’s national team three months later, with Lekjaa emphasizing that the national team that beat Portugal on Saturday featured seven players from Moroccan clubs.

    “There is no reason for European teams to be better than us,” Lekjaa said. “They are now better than us because they work in professional ways, and this is what we seek.”

    ———

    AP World Cup coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/world-cup and https://twitter.com/AP—Sports

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  • How 2022 is the new 1986 for Argentina and Morocco’s football

    How 2022 is the new 1986 for Argentina and Morocco’s football

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    As Julian Alvarez, the 22-year-old Argentinian forward, dribbled across half the pitch on Tuesday, dodging last-ditch tackles from Croatian defenders and latching onto a favourable deflection before dinking the ball past the goalkeeper, there was a sense that this had all happened before.

    Alvarez’s goal in the 2022 World Cup semifinal was in many ways a more fortuitous version of that scored by Argentinian footballing legend Diego Maradona against England at the 1986 World Cup in Mexico, in which he dribbled past half of the English defence before slotting it home and reeling off towards the stands in celebration.

    Julian Alvarez rode several challenges to put Argentina 2-0 up against Croatia on Tuesday [Sorin Furcoi/Al Jazeera]

    On Tuesday, Argentinian flags could be seen draped around Lusail Stadium bearing the iconic image of Maradona in 1986 – a tournament in which he guided La Albiceleste to World Cup victory.

    Shades of 1986

    As Alvarez celebrated with his teammates, Lionel Messi, Maradona’s successor as the icon of Argentinian football and one of the world’s greatest-ever players, put his arm around the forward. It seemed like history was repeating itself and their fans could feel it, chanting and cheering their team on long after the final whistle.

    messi
    An Argentina fan holds a banner displaying an image of Argentina’s Lionel Messi and Diego Maradona at the semifinal between Argentina and Croatia [File: Lee Smith/Reuters]

    The parallels between the two tournaments are not just confined to the Latin American team.

    Morocco have arguably been the tournament’s greatest success story, making it to the semifinals for the first time in their history – and in the history of African and Arab nations at the World Cup. Before 2022, Moroccan football’s peak moment was in 1986.

    After remaining undefeated in the group stage, they narrowly lost to a last-gasp goal from the eventual finalists, West Germany, in the round of 16.

    morocco england
    Morocco’s Mostafa El Biaz, left, tussles with England’s Bryan Robson, right, during the 1986 World Cup first-round match in Monterrey. The match ended in a scoreless draw [AFP]

    Morocco boasted some fine defensive displays in Mexico, only conceding two goals in four games. This year they have bettered this record, only letting in one goal in five matches.

    In 1986, Morocco knocked out Portugal by beating them 3-1 in the group stages; this year, they went one step further, eliminating two Iberian footballing giants – Portugal and Spain – in the knockout stages.

    Morocco will face France in this year’s other semifinal, a team that also made it to the same stage in 1986, where they lost to West Germany.

    morocco fans
    Morocco, who remain undefeated at the 2022 World Cup have enjoyed a huge amount of support at the tournament, from their own fans and fans from other Arab nations [File: Showkat Shafi/Al Jazeera]

    How the two tournaments differ

    As much as the two tournaments resonate with the two teams, there are some noticeable differences.

    Unlike Morocco who have already gone further than they did 36 years ago, Argentina have yet to equal their historic World Cup win. They also lost their first match this year, a shock defeat to Saudi Arabia, whereas, in 1986, they remained unbeaten.

    At the age of 35, Messi cannot compete with the surging, devastating pace of the 25-year-old Maradona who lit up the World Cup in 1986. However, the Paris Saint-Germain superstar has rolled back the years and netted five goals so far, the same number that Maradona scored in Mexico.

    Lionel Messi
    Lionel Messi played in the 2014 World Cup final which Argentian lost to Germany 1-0 [File: Sorin Furcoi/Al Jazeera]

    Before the 2022 World Cup began, the 1986 tournament was the benchmark that every Moroccan and Argentine team wanted to emulate.

    For many fans too young to remember the World Cup in Mexico, it was merely a great story from another era – a time when Maradona lit up the greatest footballing stage, and the Atlas Lions shocked the world by making it to the knockout stages.

    The 2022 World Cup has already changed that for Morocco. Will it also do so for Argentina?

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  • Moroccan World Cup ‘dream’ faces biggest test against France

    Moroccan World Cup ‘dream’ faces biggest test against France

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    DOHA, Qatar — Morocco’s improbable, history-making run at the World Cup is about to get its ultimate test.

    Africa’s first World Cup semifinalist is playing defending champion France and its star striker Kylian Mbappé, the leader of a new wave of soccer superstars coming out of an era dominated by Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo.

    Wednesday’s match has cultural and political connotations — Morocco was under French rule from 1912-1956 — and the outcome is far from the foregone conclusion many would presume by looking at the names of the players and the rankings of the teams.

    Morocco has exceeded all expectations in Qatar by beating second-ranked Belgium in the group stage and then eliminating European powerhouses Spain and Portugal in the knockout phase to reach the semifinals.

    No African or Arab nation has ever gotten this far.

    It is one of the biggest stories in the World Cup’s 92-year history and Morocco is not done yet.

    “I was asked if we can win the World Cup and I said, ‘Why not? We can dream, it doesn’t cost you anything to have dreams,’” said Walid Regragui, Morocco’s French-born coach. “European countries are used to winning the World Cup and we have played top sides, we have not had an easy run. Anyone playing us is going to be afraid of us now.”

    Even France?

    The defending champions have just passed their own big test by coming through a tough quarterfinal match against England, on a rare occasion when Mbappé was kept quiet.

    No player has scored more than his five goals and it won’t be easy for Mbappé to add to that tally against Morocco, which has yet to concede a goal to an opposition player at this World Cup — or indeed in its nine games since Regragui was hired in August. The only goal allowed was an own-goal by its defender, Nayef Aguerd, against Canada in the group stage.

    Morocco might have some injuries now — Aguerd and fellow center back Romain Saiss could be missing Wednesday — but Regragui’s game plan relies on team shape and discipline more than any specific individual.

    “We recovered well. We have good doctors and every day we get good news. No one is ruled out and no one is for certain,” Regragui told reporters on Tuesday. “We’ll use the best team possible.”

    The Morocco coach said his team is ready to “change the mentality” of Africa, and he’s told his players not to settle for anything less than the top prize.

    “We’re going to fight to move on, for the African nations, for the Arab world,” he said.

    Regragui said defender Achraf Hakimi is looking forward to a “nice duel” with Mbappé, his teammate at Paris Saint-Germain, but added that France doesn’t just depend on its star player.

    “Well have to block Kylian, but not just him. Hakimi is super motivated to beat his friend,” he said.

    The key to winning the game, he said, will be Morocco’s “team spirit” and the support of the crowd at Al Bayt Stadium, where French President Emmanuel Macron is set to be in attendance along with tens of thousands of green-and-red-clad Morocco fans. It will feel like a home game for Morocco’s players, which might level things up even more.

    “We have the best fans in the world along with Argentines and Brazilians. They’re people who come from anywhere in the world to support their country,” Regragui said. “We’re going to play like being at home and that’s the most important thing in the world.”

    France starts as the big favorite, though, because of its star quality and experience. In Mbappé and Antoine Griezmann, a forward who has reinvented himself as a midfield playmaker at the World Cup, the team has two of the World Cup’s leading players while Olivier Giroud’s winner against England took him to four goals — the same as Messi.

    They have attacking threats from everywhere and that intangible quality of just knowing how to get the job done. France center back Raphael Varane said there will be no danger of complacency among his teammates in a gam against the world’s No. 22-ranked team.

    “We have enough experience in the team to not fall into that trap,” he said. “We know Morocco isn’t here by chance. It is up to us, as experienced players, to make sure we are all prepared for another battle.”

    ———

    Associated Press writer Luis Andres Henao contributed to this report from Doha.

    ———

    Follow Steve Douglas on Twitter at https://twitter.com/sdouglas80

    ———

    AP World Cup coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/world-cup and https://twitter.com/AP—Sports

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  • England’s Harry Kane ‘gutted’ by penalty miss against France

    England’s Harry Kane ‘gutted’ by penalty miss against France

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    “There’s no hiding from it, it hurts,” England’s captain said on social media about his World Cup penalty miss.

    England’s Harry Kane has said he is “absolutely gutted” after missing a crucial penalty shot that could have tied the match in his team’s World Cup quarterfinal loss to France.

    Kane sent the ball sailing several feet over the French goalkeeper and his Tottenham Hotspur teammate Hugo Lloris, in the 83rd minute of the match on Saturday, essentially sealing a 2-1 win — and a semifinal place — for the French.

    On Sunday, Kane said the botched scoring chance against the reigning World Cup champions “will take some time to get over”.

    The 29-year-old striker also took “responsibility for” his botched shot.

    “Absolutely gutted,” Kane wrote on Instagram.

    “We’ve given it everything and it’s come down to a small detail which I take responsibility for. There’s no hiding from it, it hurts and it’ll take some time to get over it but that’s part of sport.”

    England has not won a World Cup since 1966.

    The English captain’s missed penalty came as the Three Lions frantically attempted to claw themselves back into the match after Aurelien Tchouameni and Olivier Giroud gave Les Bleus a slim 2-1 lead.

    It was Kane’s second penalty kick of the match. The English captain had sent the crowd at Al Bayt Stadium into a frenzy in the 54th minute after he hammered home England’s first goal past Lloris to equal Wayne Rooney as the highest scorer for England.

    Kane, though, said he is not about to dwell on the loss.

    “Now it’s about using the experience to be mentally and physically stronger for the next challenge,” Kane said.

    “Thanks for all the support throughout the tournament — it means a lot.”

    Kane and his team will now set their sights on the 2024 UEFA European Football Championship in Germany.

    France goalkeeper Hugo Lloris, falling to his right, watches Harry Kane's penalty pass over the net at Qatar's Al Bayt Stadium.
    France goalkeeper Hugo Lloris watches Harry Kane’s penalty pass over the net at Qatar’s Al Bayt Stadium on December 10, 2022 [Sorin Furcoi/Al Jazeera]

    Kane was a force in Qatar, scoring two goals and tallying three assists — the most by any player at the tournament — for the Three Lions after starting in all of England’s five tournament matches. The last time any English player accomplished the feat was David Beckham in 2002.

    Kane ultimately fell short of his 2018 performance in Russia — his first World Cup — which saw him collect six goals en route to a Golden Boot as the tournament’s top scorer.

    Following the loss to France, England coach Gareth Southgate’s future with the team is uncertain.

    Southgate said he needed time to decide whether continuing on as coach was the “right decision” for the team.

    France now prepares to clash with a spirited Morocco in the World Cup semifinals.

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  • World Cup 2022 – Morocco 1-0 Portugal: Youssef En-Nesyri scores winner as Cristiano Ronaldo exits Qatar tournament

    World Cup 2022 – Morocco 1-0 Portugal: Youssef En-Nesyri scores winner as Cristiano Ronaldo exits Qatar tournament

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    Walid Regragui, head coach of Morocco, celebrates after the team’s victory against Portugal on Dec. 10, 2022 in Doha, Qatar.

    Justin Setterfield | Getty Images Sport | Getty Images

    Morocco became the first African nation to reach the semi-finals of the World Cup as Youssef En-Nesyri’s first-half winner added Portugal to the list of shocked teams in Qatar.

    Striker En-Nesyri profited on a mistake from Portugal goalkeeper Diogo Costa to head home the historic strike for not only Walid Regragui’s side — but the entire African continent.

    Not even the 51st minute introduction of Cristiano Ronaldo — once again left on the bench by his manager Fernando Santos — could inspire a Portugal comeback, as Bruno Fernandes hit the crossbar while Goncalo Ramos and Bernardo Silva missed the target from good positions.

    Late on, Morocco required heroics from goalkeeper Bono who saved from Joao Felix and Ronaldo while Pepe missed a sitter in the final minute of eight in stoppage time — which also saw substitute striker Walid Cheddira sent off for two quickfire yellow cards.

    Morocco’s shock run to the last four — which has seen them beat Belgium, Spain and Portugal and concede just one own goal in five World Cup matches — sets up a semi-final clash with the winner of England and France’s blockbuster quarter-final.

    How Morocco pulled off another shock to create history

    Fresh from their 6-1 win over Switzerland in the last 16, Portugal began the game brightly with a couple of first-half chances falling to Joao Felix.

    The forward put an early header straight at Bono and saw a deflected shot land on the top of the Morocco goalkeeper’s net before flashing over a first-time finish from the edge of the area when found in acres of space.

    Moments of the match…

    • 5 mins: Joao Felix missed the first of three big first-half chances by heading straight at Bono from a free-kick.
    • 42 mins: Youssef En-Nesyri beats Diogo Costa to the ball to head home what ends up being the winner.
    • 45 mins: Bruno Fernandes hits the bar and moments later sees a penalty appeal waved away.
    • 51 mins: Moments after Hakim Ziyech nearly made it 2-0, Cristiano Ronaldo enters the field of play.
    • 58: Goncalo Ramos heads a free header wide of goal following Otavio’s cross.
    • 83 mins: Bono tips over Joao Felix’s goalbound strike away from the top corner of the net.
    • 90+1 mins: Ronaldo breaks clear of the Morocco defense but his low shot is saved by Bono.
    • 90+4: Walid Cheddira sent off for Morocco after two quickfire yellow cards.
    • 90+7: Pepe heads wide from close range in the final big chance of the game for Portugal
    • Full Time: Ronaldo storms off the pitch in tears

    Meanwhile, Fernando Santos’ side were warned about En-Nesyri’s threat in the air as he fired over a free header from a corner, while Selim Amallah and Sofiane Boufal went close in quick succession but both failed to find the target.

    Eventually, Morocco’s resilience paid off three minutes before half-time as Portugal goalkeeper Costa came for Attiyat Allah’s long hanging ball from the left and collided with his own defender in Dias, leaving En-Nesyri to nod home.

    Youssef En-Nesyri scores a goal for Morocco during the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 quarter final match against Portugal on Dec. 10, 2022 in Doha, Qatar.

    Justin Setterfield | Getty Images Sport | Getty Images

    A frantic end to the first half saw Fernandes crash a dipping volley against the crossbar before seeing a penalty challenge waved away by referee Facundo Tello when put through on goal moments later.

    Morocco started the second period strongly, with Hakim Ziyech testing the gloves of Costa from a free-kick — a major chance which prompted the introduction of Ronaldo on 51 minutes

    But it was Goncalo Ramos who was on the receiving end of a major chance immediately after Ronaldo’s entrance, heading Otavio’s defense-opening cross wide from inside the box.

    Bernardo Silva had two great opportunities in quick succession to level but curled over from the edge of the area before failing to connect in the box after a smart free-kick move.

    Yet none of those chances compared to the three that fell Portugal’s way in the final 10 minutes. First, Felix’s rasping drive towards the top corner was tipped over by Bono — who had to be equal to Ronaldo’s low effort when the 37-year-old ran through one-on-one.

    Morocco were close to finding a second when Zakaria Aboukhlal burst clear through but his clumsy chip was easily saved by Costa — yet Pepe had an even better chance at the other end as he headed wide from inside the six-yard box following Rafael Leao’s cross.

    The full-time whistle sparked jubilant scenes from the Morocco players and their thousands of supporters in the stands — while Ronaldo immediately marched off the pitch in tears in what is likely to be his last World Cup appearance.

    Cristiano Ronaldo of Portugal reacts during the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 quarter final match against Morocco on Dec. 10, 2022 in Doha, Qatar.

    Patrick Smith | FIFA | Getty Images

    Pepe rages at Argentine referee

    Portugal defender Pepe criticized the appointment of Argentine referee Tello in the wake of the Argentina players’ comments about officiating and added time following their quarter-final win over the Netherlands on Friday.

    Argentina conceded an equalizer at the end of 11 minutes of stoppage time to send their tie into extra-time, with goalkeeper Emiliano Martinez claiming referee Antonio Mateu Lahoz wanted the Netherlands to score, while captain Lionel Messi was also critical.

    Pepe says the appointment of Tello in this game should not have been approved, with Argentina still in the tournament.

    “We conceded a goal that we weren’t expecting but… I’m going to have to say it. It’s unacceptable for an Argentine referee to referee our game,” said Pepe. “After what happened yesterday, with Messi talking, all of Argentina talking and the referee comes here.

    “What did we play the second half? The goalkeeper kept dropping to the ground. There were only eight minutes of stoppage time. We worked hard and the referee [gave] eight minutes?

    “We didn’t play anything in the second half. The only team that played football was us. We are sad. We had the quality to win the World Cup and we didn’t manage to.”

    “Our players are distressed,” said Portugal coach Fernando Santos, who shrugged off questions about his own future and added that he didn’t regret not starting Ronaldo.

    “Cristiano is a great player and he came on when we thought it was necessary. But no, no regrets.”

    Meanwhile, Morocco goalkeeper Bono said: “Pinch me, I’m dreaming.

    “Morocco is ready to face anyone in the world. We have changed the mentality of the generation coming after us. They’ll know Moroccan players can create miracles.”

    Player of the match — Sofyan Amrabat (Morocco)

    Such was Portugal’s domination in possession, Morocco metronome Sofyan Amrabat only touched the ball 32 times in the 90 minutes.

    Sofyan Amrabat celebrates Morocco’s victory over Portugal during the World Cup on Dec. 10, 2022 in Doha, Qatar.

    Eric Verhoeven | Soccrates Images | Getty Images Sport | Getty Images

    But what the midfielder did on the rare occasions in which he did get on the ball was phenomenal and he was instrumental in relieving pressure on the Morocco backline.

    Amrabat made eight ball recoveries and three tackles but also showed his ability to bring the ball forward — entering the final third twice and creating one clear-cut chance.

    Put simply, Amrabat was everywhere for Morocco and is staking a real claim to be named Player of the Tournament.

    ‘Don’t take Morocco lightly’

    Sky Sports’ Graeme Souness speaking on ITV:

    “Morocco were fabulous — it was a mirror of the Spanish game [which they won on penalties].

    “They were sensational when it came to defending their box. In terms of the hard work, being organized and determination they were a credit to their country.

    “Do not take them lightly. They will not be a different Morocco next time, they will play the exact same way.

    “They had a game plan which worked well. Every time the Portuguese got the ball, they got back in numbers. It’s ok to say that, but when you’re constantly bringing the other team onto to you, one person normally falls asleep in danger. No-one did that.

    “For Argentina, France and England, if you asked them and they gave you an answer, they would be happy for Morocco getting there. That might be a mistake.”

    What does the result mean?

    Morocco move into the World Cup semi-final on Wednesday, Dec. 14, kick-off at 7 p.m. GMT. Should they win that, the World Cup final takes place at 3 p.m. GMT on Sunday, Dec. 18.

    The African side will play the winner of England and France‘s quarter-final, which kicks off at 7 p.m. GMT on Saturday night.

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  • Morocco reaches World Cup semifinals, tops Portugal, Ronaldo

    Morocco reaches World Cup semifinals, tops Portugal, Ronaldo

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    DOHA, Qatar — Africa finally has a team in the World Cup semifinals, and so does the Arab world.

    Morocco delivered a seminal moment in the nearly 100-year history of soccer’s biggest tournament, beating Cristiano Ronaldo and his Portugal team 1-0 Saturday in the another shocking result in the first World Cup staged in the Middle East.

    While a tearful Ronaldo headed right down the tunnel — and maybe into international retirement — after the final whistle, Morocco’s players tossed their coach in the air and waved their country’s flag as they linked arms in front of celebrating fans.

    “Pinch me, I’m dreaming,” Morocco goalkeeper Yassine Bounou said. “Morocco is ready to face anyone in the world. We have changed the mentality of the generation coming after us. They’ll know Moroccan players can create miracles.”

    Youssef En-Nesyri scored the winning goal in the 42nd minute to continue an improbable run that has generated an outpouring of pride in the Arab world, inspiring displays in Arab identity from fans in different countries.

    Africa is also rejoicing at finally having a nation advancing to the levels typically only reached by European or South American teams. Cameroon (1990), Senegal (2002) and Ghana (2010) all reached the quarterfinals but got no further.

    Morocco has broken through, setting up a semifinal match against either France or England.

    The 37-year-old Ronaldo, one of soccer’s greatest players but now a fading force, didn’t start for the second straight game and came on as a substitute in the 51st minute. He missed his only chance to equalize in stoppage time.

    The five-time world player of the year is set to finish his career without capturing the World Cup or ever getting to the final. He walked right off the field after the final whistle, only briefly stopped by two Morocco players wishing to shake his hand and a spectator who confronted him near the entrance to the tunnel, and was crying as he headed to the locker room.

    If this is the end for Ronaldo at international level, he’ll finish with 118 goals — a record in men’s soccer — and a European Championship title but not soccer’s biggest prize. He only got as far as the semifinals in the World Cup, in 2006.

    “Our players are distressed,” said Portugal coach Fernando Santos, who shrugged off questions about his own future and added that he didn’t regret not starting Ronaldo. “Cristiano is a great player and he came on when we thought it was necessary. But no, no regrets.”

    There’s no reason why this Morocco squad — coached by French-born Walid Regragui and containing 14 players born abroad — cannot go all the way to the title. They topped a group that included second-ranked Belgium and fellow semifinalist Croatia and have now taken down two of Europe’s heavyweights in Spain — after a penalty shootout in the round of 16 — and Portugal in the quarterfinals.

    “We have gone into the history books,” Regragui said. “We have made the continent and our people happy and proud.”

    Morocco’s defense has yet to concede a goal by an opposition player at this year’s World Cup — the only one it has allowed was an own-goal — and it stifled a Portugal team which beat Switzerland 6-1 in the last 16 to thrust itself among the favorites.

    In a game played to the backdrop of non-stop whistles and jeers by Morocco’s passionate fans, the team relied almost exclusively on counterattacks and scored from one of them.

    A cross was swung in from the left and En-Nesyri leapt between Portugal goalkeeper Diogo Costa and defender Ruben Dias to head into the empty net.

    Ronaldo, who will be 41 by the time of the 2026 World Cup in the United States, Mexico and Canada, barely got a touch of the ball until stoppage time when he got in behind Morocco’s defense off a long ball forward. His low shot was saved by Bounou, who hadn’t had too much to do before that point.

    Substitute Walid Cheddira was shown a red card for Morocco early in stoppage time for collecting a second yellow card in as many minutes.

    After Portugal center back Pepe headed wide from inside the six-yard box in the sixth minute of added time, Ronaldo fell to his knees in dejection.

    While Lionel Messi will be in the semifinals with Argentina, the other soccer great of this generation won’t be.

    ———

    Steve Douglas is at https://twitter.com/sdouglas80

    ———

    AP World Cup coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/world-cup and https://twitter.com/AP—Sports

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  • ‘What a great day’: Morocco wakes up to a dream that came true

    ‘What a great day’: Morocco wakes up to a dream that came true

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    As the sun rose above Morocco on Wednesday morning, the thrill and ecstasy from the night before had barely settled.

    It is just hours after the Moroccan football team had created history – a place in the quarter-finals of the World Cup after beating Spain on Tuesday evening in Doha.

    It was an unprecedented feat for a side that not many picked to be in the last eight.

    In Doha, the fans sang, danced and celebrated into the early morning. And it was a feeling not lost on Moroccans back home.

    “What a great day to be a Moroccan,” Abdessamad told Al Jazeera in Marrakesh. “My heart sank every time we failed to score from an opportunity. As Spain missed their penalties, I forgot everything around me. Suddenly, the loud roar around me made me realise we made it to the quarter-finals.

    “Our team is on the road to something more magical, something bigger, something insane.”

    In the capital, Rabat, cafes were lined up with people eager to watch the match, roads were packed and squares where screenings were taking place were filled with flags and Moroccans wearing team jerseys. A feeling of hope and optimism prevailed.

    Fans in Casablanca after Morocco beat Spain [Abdelhak Balhaki/Reuters]

    The win gave them an excuse to celebrate all night.

    “It’s the first time I had this feeling,” Fahd Belbachir was quoted as saying by Reuters news agency. “We’re so proud.”

    It was a day where history was made and Moroccans on the streets the morning after said they could not be more proud of what the team had achieved.

    Some were even in disbelief, not fully able to comprehend that the dream was in fact reality.

    “We are so proud of our Lions, who fought hard to get us into the quarter-finals,” Niama Meddoun, a Rabat resident, said. “We are delighted to be Moroccans today, since we are the first Arab country that has reached the quarter-finals.”

    Videos circulating online showed the King of Morocco, Mohammed VI, out celebrating with a Moroccan flag.

    He praised the national team “who gave their all and blazed a trail throughout this great sporting event”. He added that the players represented the “hopes and dreams of Moroccans in Morocco, Qatar, and all over the world”.

    With only eight out of the 32 teams left, Morocco is the only Arab and African nation in the tournament at this stage at the first World Cup being held in the Middle East.

    Morocco’s success at the tournament has reverberated across the Arab world and among Moroccan and some other immigrant communities in Europe.

    hakimi
    The winning penalty scored by Achraf Hakimi [Matthew Childs/Reuters]

    Ceuta is a Spanish exclave which borders Morocco on the North African coast. Its population is a mix of Spaniards and Moroccan residents and workers. The Associated Press reported that the win was also celebrated with cars honking horns there.

    “What pride, what happiness, now to celebrate with friends. I have lost my voice,” said 20-year-old Ismael Mustafa. “We were able to pull it off. For Spain? You will win next time, so no worries.”

    TV channels in Morocco dedicated the news bulletins to pan to various celebrations taking place across all cities and regions in Morocco.

    The common denominator in all: euphoric supporters enjoying the joyous occasion. “Spain is gone, who is next” was a common phrase shouted across the country.

    “The national team doesn’t only represent Moroccans, it represent Arabs and Africans from all over the world,” one fan told Al Jazeera in Marrakesh. “Football has united all these nations under the Moroccan flag.”

    Reporting by Khadija Satou in Marrakech and Faras Ghani in Doha

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