Morocco foils terror plot on security sites

Vehicles of Morocco's Police and Auxiliary Forces are deployed in northern Morocco on September 30, 2024. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 01 February 2025
Follow

Morocco foils terror plot on security sites

  • Moroccan authorities believe the suspects had direct ties to a Daesh leader in the Sahel who had recruited and indoctrinated them through digital communication platforms, according to preliminary investigations

RABAT: Moroccan counterterrorism police said they foiled a plot to “attack security sites” as four people suspected of links to Daesh in the Sahel were arrested.
Habboub Cherkaoui, head of the Central Bureau of Judicial Investigations, said in a press conference in Sale that the operation had prevented a “dangerous terrorist plot.”
The four suspects, all Moroccans including three brothers, were taken into custody on Sunday in Had Soualem, near Casablanca, according to an earlier police statement.
Cherkaoui said the group had pre-recorded a statement claiming responsibility for the planned attacks by using explosives.
Investigations later revealed they targeted “key security facilities, a supermarket and public areas” frequented by Moroccans and foreigners, he added.
Moroccan authorities believe the suspects had direct ties to a Daesh leader in the Sahel who had recruited and indoctrinated them through digital communication platforms, according to preliminary investigations.
He said the suspects were aged between 26 and 35 and had worked “modest jobs.”
Cherkaoui said jihadist groups in Africa posed a “real threat to the kingdom.”
He said 130 Moroccan nationals have traveled to extremists’ battlefields in Somalia and the Sahel since late 2022.
Many of them were “seeking to expand their groups’ activities into the kingdom,” the official added.
While the country has largely avoided terrorist violence in recent years, Moroccan security forces regularly report arrests and disrupted attack plots.

 


Tunisia’s famed blue-and-white village threatened after record rains

Updated 31 January 2026
Follow

Tunisia’s famed blue-and-white village threatened after record rains

  • The one-time home of French philosopher Michel Foucault and writer Andre Gide, the village is protected under Tunisian preservation law, pending a UNESCO decision on its bid for World Heritage status

SIDI BOU SAID, Tunisia: Perched on a hill overlooking Carthage, Tunisia’s famed blue-and-white village of Sidi Bou Said now faces the threat of landslides, after record rainfall tore through parts of its slopes.
Last week, Tunisia saw its heaviest downpour in more than 70 years. The storm killed at least five people, with others still missing.
Narrow streets of this village north of Tunis — famed for its pink bougainvillea and studded wooden doors — were cut off by fallen trees, rocks and thick clay. Even more worryingly for residents, parts of the hillside have broken loose.
“The situation is delicate” and “requires urgent intervention,” Mounir Riabi, the regional director of civil defense in Tunis, recently told AFP.
“Some homes are threatened by imminent danger,” he said.
Authorities have banned heavy vehicles from driving into the village and ordered some businesses and institutions to close, such as the Ennejma Ezzahra museum.

- Scared -

Fifty-year-old Maya, who did not give her full name, said she was forced to leave her century-old family villa after the storm.
“Everything happened very fast,” she recalled. “I was with my mother and, suddenly, extremely violent torrents poured down.”
“I saw a mass of mud rushing toward the house, then the electricity cut off. I was really scared.”
Her Moorish-style villa sustained significant damage.
One worker on site, Said Ben Farhat, said waterlogged earth sliding from the hillside destroyed part of a kitchen wall.
“Another rainstorm and it will be a catastrophe,” he said.
Shop owners said the ban on heavy vehicles was another blow to their businesses, as they usually rely on tourist buses to bring in traffic.
When President Kais Saied visited the village on Wednesday, vendors were heard shouting: “We want to work.”
One trader, Mohamed Fedi, told AFP afterwards there were “no more customers.”
“We have closed shop,” he said, adding that the shops provide a livelihood to some 200 families.

- Highly unstable -

Beyond its famous architecture, the village also bears historical and spiritual significance.
The village was named after a 12th-century Sufi saint, Abu Said Al-Baji, who had established a religious center there. His shrine still sits atop the hill.
The one-time home of French philosopher Michel Foucault and writer Andre Gide, the village is protected under Tunisian preservation law, pending a UNESCO decision on its bid for World Heritage status.
Experts say solutions to help preserve Sidi Bou Said could include restricting new development, building more retaining walls and improving drainage to prevent runoff from accumulating.
Chokri Yaich, a geologist speaking to Tunisian radio Mosaique FM, said climate change has made protecting the hill increasingly urgent, warning of more storms like last week’s.
The hill’s clay-rich soil loses up to two thirds of its cohesion when saturated with water, making it highly unstable, Yaich explained.
He also pointed to marine erosion and the growing weight of urbanization, saying that construction had increased by about 40 percent over the past three decades.
For now, authorities have yet to announce a protection plan, leaving home and shop owners anxious, as the weather remains unpredictable.