Morocco evacuates 50,000 as flooding threatens city after weeks of heavy rain

An emergency vehicle drives through flood waters as residents are evacuated and relocated to other towns as preventive and emergency evacuations are carried out to move residents living near flood-prone areas following the weather alert and the rise in the water level of the Loukkos River, with flooding expected in the coming days, in Ksar El-Kebir on February 1, 2026. (AFP)
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Updated 02 February 2026
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Morocco evacuates 50,000 as flooding threatens city after weeks of heavy rain

  • Officials said the floods were partly triggered by water released from the nearby Oued Makhazine dam, which ⁠had reached full capacity

RABAT: Morocco has evacuated more than 50,000 people, nearly half the population of the northwestern city of Ksar El-Kebir, as flooding driven by ​weeks of heavy rain threatened to inundate the city, state media said on Monday.
“The city has become a ghost town,” local resident Hicham Ajttou told Reuters by phone. “All markets and shops are closed and most residents have either left voluntarily or been evacuated.”
Authorities set up shelters and temporary camps and ‌barred entry into ‌Ksar El-Kebir as rising water ‌levels ⁠in ​the ‌Loukkos River spread across several neighborhoods. Only departures from the city were permitted, while electricity was cut in parts of it and schools were ordered to remain closed until Saturday.
Officials said the floods were partly triggered by water released from the nearby Oued Makhazine dam, which ⁠had reached full capacity. Ksar El-Kebir lies about 190 km (120 miles) ‌north of Rabat.
Ajttou said he moved his ‍family to Tangier last ‍week and returned to Ksar El-Kebir to volunteer ‍in relief efforts.
“The question that worries us is what comes next. The dam is full and we don’t know how long this situation will last,” he said.
The army has ​deployed rescue units, trucks, equipment and medics to support evacuation and rescue operations and buses evacuated ⁠people from the city.
State TV Al Oula showed a helicopter rescuing four people trapped by rising waters in Oued Ouargha in the nearby province of Ouezzane.
Further south, rising levels of the Sebou River prompted authorities to evacuate several villagers in Sidi Kacem and reinforce riverbanks with sandbags and barriers.
The heavy rainfall has brought an end to a seven-year drought that pushed Morocco to invest heavily in desalination plants. The national dam-filling rate ‌is now close to 62 percent, with several major reservoirs reaching full capacity, according to official data.


Red Cross transfers 8 Palestinians from Israeli detention to Gaza

Updated 23 February 2026
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Red Cross transfers 8 Palestinians from Israeli detention to Gaza

  • They were taken across the Karm Abu Salem border crossing to Shuhada Al-Aqsa Hospital in Deir Al-Balah, where they were reunited with their families

LONDON: The International Committee of the Red Cross transferred eight Palestinians from Israeli detention to the Gaza Strip on Monday.

The organization took them across the Karm Abu Salem border crossing to Shuhada Al-Aqsa Hospital in Deir Al-Balah and helped reunite them with their families.

The Red Cross has been unable to visit Palestinian detainees in Israeli detention centers since October 2023, as a result of which the fate and location of many detainees from Gaza were unknown, the Palestinian Wafa news agency reported.

The Red Cross said that according to the principles of international humanitarian law, detainees must be treated humanely, held in proper conditions and allowed to have contact with their families.

Israel is holding about 9,245 Palestinian prisoners in jails, including 358 held without charge or trial under administrative detention, according to Jerusalem-based rights group HaMoked.