Breaking 17:00 Sudan: first commercial flight lands in Khartoum after nearly three years 16:40 Venezuela: human rights activist Javier Tarazona freed after over four years in prison 16:20 Saint-Gobain Sekurit centralizes European automotive glass rework in Kenitra, Morocco 16:00 DRC: landslide at Rubaya mine could leave at least 200 dead, authorities fear 15:40 Ukraine: Russian strike hits maternity hospital in Zaporizhzhia, six injured 15:20 Jewish school in Paris vandalized overnight, religious plaque destroyed 15:00 Tetouan schools closed on Monday due to severe weather 14:40 Waymo aims to raise 16 billion dollars to expand autonomous vehicle services 14:20 New car sales in France down 6.55% in January 14:20 Team of the week: from Nador to Ksar El Kebir, the test of action 14:00 Preventive evacuations ordered in Sidi Kacem amid rising sebour river levels 13:40 Crans-montana fire death toll rises to 41 after victim dies from injuries 13:20 Joseph Aoun visits Spain on official trip 13:00 Fuel prices rise again in Morocco as diesel and gasoline costs increase 12:40 Moroccan lawyers intensify strike, paralyzing courts 12:20 Floods hit Ksar El Kebir: army and rescue teams evacuate residents 12:00 Türkiye expresses condolences over deadly landslide in DR Congo 11:40 Rafah crossing in Gaza reopens with severe restrictions 11:20 Turkey bus accident kills eight, injures 26 11:00 Türkiye condemns deadly terrorist attacks in Pakistan’s Balochistan province 10:40 Saudi Arabia-Pakistan defense pact will not include Turkey 10:20 New winter storm hits the United States 10:00 Iran labels European armies “terrorist” in retaliation for EU measures 09:40 Controversial speed camera near Italian border: Ventimiglia found guilty of abusive procedure 09:20 Capgemini to sell subsidiary working with US immigration agency ICE 09:00 Ukraine: two killed in Russian drone strike on Dnipro 08:40 Trump says Iran is “talking to us” amid rising tensions 08:20 Switzerland: dozens killed in bar fire at Crans-Montana ski resort 07:56 Majority bloc backs Nouri al-Maliki for prime minister despite Trump warnings

Summer drownings surge in Morocco as unsupervised beaches drive fatalities

Friday 22 August 2025 - 12:20
By: Dakir Madiha
Summer drownings surge in Morocco as unsupervised beaches drive fatalities

Morocco’s peak holiday season has been shadowed by a sharp rise in water emergencies, with thousands of swimmers pulled from the surf and dozens of lives lost in just over two months. The Directorate General of Civil Protection (DGPC) recorded 14,040 drowning or near-drowning incidents nationwide between May 1 and July 15, underscoring persistent safety gaps at popular beaches and remote swimming spots.

A seasonal toll with uneven risks

Rescue teams averted tragedy in the vast majority of cases: 13,970 people were saved thanks to rapid lifeguard response and coordinated emergency operations. Even so, 49 deaths were confirmed and 21 people remained missing during the period. The data reveal a stark safety divide. Officially supervised beaches registered 16 deaths and three missing swimmers, while unsupervised areas accounted for 33 deaths and 18 missing—more than double the fatalities, highlighting the peril of “wild” or remote beaches often favored by families and young people.

Why incidents spike in summer

Authorities and safety experts cite a mix of impulsiveness and overconfidence, especially among younger swimmers, as key drivers of risk-taking in rough waters or restricted zones. Inadequate safety measures and inconsistent signage at some sites compound the danger, while limited budgets push some beachgoers toward unmonitored areas where lifesaving resources are scarce. Dense crowds—often tens of thousands at a single beach on peak days—can overwhelm local capacities even where lifeguards are present.

Emergency response on the front lines

Civil Protection has deployed thousands of personnel and volunteers to high-traffic beaches, working in tandem with the Royal Gendarmerie, National Police, and, when needed, the Royal Navy for search operations. Municipalities have expanded safety signage and first-aid stations, but authorities acknowledge that current infrastructure struggles to match seasonal demand.

Toward a prevention-first approach

Officials and safety advocates are pushing long-term solutions aimed at prevention and faster response. Priorities include expanding supervised zones with trained lifeguards, tightening controls over forbidden areas, scaling public first-aid training, and rolling out modern rescue tools—from drones to connected buoys. School-based and media campaigns are designed to instill water-safety basics early, reinforcing that swimming only in monitored zones dramatically reduces the risk of fatal outcomes.


  • Fajr
  • Sunrise
  • Dhuhr
  • Asr
  • Maghrib
  • Isha

Read more

This website, walaw.press, uses cookies to provide you with a good browsing experience and to continuously improve our services. By continuing to browse this site, you agree to the use of these cookies.