Is Morocco’s migration policy protecting Sub-Saharan African migrants or managing them for political and security ends? This article unpacks the gaps, the risks, and the paths toward real rights-based integration.
Sofiane Al-Kamri
{}Is Morocco’s migration policy protecting Sub-Saharan African migrants or managing them for political and security ends? This article unpacks the gaps, the risks, and the paths toward real rights-based integration.
Sofiane Al-Kamri
Mike Fleet
Hannan Hussain
Samar Sulaiman
Sada is an online journal rooted in Carnegie’s Middle East Program that seeks to foster and enrich debate about key political, economic, and social issues in the Arab world and provides a venue for new and established voices to deliver reflective analysis on these issues.
Sada’s annual documentary series features young filmmakers telling stories from their homes across the Middle East and North Africa, each year focused on different themes including climate change and internal displacement.
This film in the Sada documentary series tells the stories of two young people displaced from Iraq and the political turmoil that pushed them to migration. It also presents the interventions of the head of the Soraya Organization, an NGO that works to improve the conditions and futures of the displaced.
Ten years after the launch of Operation Dignity, the Eastern Province in Libya continues to host a significant number of internally displaced persons (IDP) communities. This film in the Sada documentary series presents the hardships of Libya's displaced populations in acquiring identification papers and facing displacement-related bias.
The war between the Sudanese army and the Rapid Support Forces has forced thousands to flee to displacement camps where they face severe shortages of shelter, medical care, and food. In this documentary, the displaced recount painful stories of their long journeys and their suffering under harsh security and living conditions.