At least 19 killed in collapse of two buildings in Morocco’s Fez, state news agency says

Emergency personnel search for victims in the rubble of two collapsed buildings in the Al-Massira area of Fez late on Dec. 9, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 10 December 2025
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At least 19 killed in collapse of two buildings in Morocco’s Fez, state news agency says

  • Search and rescue operations ongoing, injured taken to hospital
  • Fez is a former capital, located in northeastern Morocco

At least 19 people were killed and 16 injured early on Wednesday by the collapse of two buildings in Morocco’s northeastern city of Fez, a former capital, the state news agency said.

Local authorities in the Fez prefecture reported two adjacent four-story buildings had collapsed overnight, the state news agency said.

The buildings were inhabited by eight families and were in the Al-Mustaqbal neighborhood, it reported.

As soon as they were informed of the incident, local authorities, security services, and civil protection units moved to the scene and immediately began search and rescue operations, it said.

The injured were transported to the university hospital center in Fez, while search and rescue operations continued around the clock to find others who may still be trapped under the rubble, the news agency reported. Most of Morocco’s population, financial, industrial hubs and vital infrastructure are concentrated in the northwest, with the rest of the country reliant on farming, fisheries and tourism.


Lebanon foreign minister declines Tehran visit, proposes talks in neutral country

Updated 10 December 2025
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Lebanon foreign minister declines Tehran visit, proposes talks in neutral country

  • Lebanon’s foreign minister Youssef Raji cited ‘current conditions’ for the decision not to go to Iran

Lebanon’s foreign minister Youssef Raji said on Wednesday he had declined an invitation to visit Tehran for now, proposing instead talks with Iran in a mutually agreed neutral third country, Lebanese state news agency NNA reported.

Raji cited “current conditions” for the decision not to go to Iran, without elaborating, and stressed that the move did not mean rejection of dialogue with Iran. He did not immediately respond to a request from Reuters for additional comment.

Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi had extended the invitation last week, seeking talks on bilateral ties.

Raji said Lebanon stood ready to open a new phase of constructive relations with Iran, on the condition that ties be based strictly on mutual respect, full recognition of each country’s independence and sovereignty, and non-interference in internal affairs under any pretext.

In an apparent reference to calls to disarm Hezbollah, the Lebanese armed movement allied for decades to Iran, Raji added that no strong state could be built unless the government held the exclusive right to hold weapons.

Hezbollah, once a dominant political force with wide influence over the Lebanese state, was severely weakened by Israeli strikes last year that ended with a US-brokered ceasefire. It has been under mounting domestic and international pressure to surrender its weapons and place all arms under state control.

In August, Iran’s top security official Ali Larijani visited Beirut, warning Lebanon not to “confuse its enemies with its friends.” In June, Foreign Minister Araqchi said Tehran sought a

“new page” in ties.