Moroccan Kamal El Hajji has been awarded with the British Empire medal for his services as front of house security manager to the United Kingdom’s Ministry of Justice in the investiture ceremony on the 3rd of March 2015, at Ingatestone Hall Essex. A proud and exciting moment that he got to experience with his family present during the award ceremony. He is also expected to attend the Queen’s annual garden party to be held in May 2015
Author: Equipe de rédaction
The multinational Procter and Gamble appointed the Moroccan engineer Omar Channawi vice president of the Asia Pacific region, including among others Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia and Vietnam.
According to the General Census of Population and Housing conducted in Tunisia for the year 2014, “the number of Moroccans living in Tunisia has reached 5,565 out of 24,841 people from the Maghreb region.”
Several social security agreements signed by Morocco for the benefit of the Moroccans abroad have not been implemented, reveals a study presented Monday, April 13 in Rabat, noting that several members of this community do not enjoy the rights mentioned by these agreements and suffer from a lack of communication and outreach.
A new report from the Swedish Employment Agency suggests that Sweden will need at least 64,000 new immigrants each year to be able to fund schools and public health care.
Greece has reached a critical point with regards to the strong wave of refugees and illegal immigrants. The local government has also demanded that Europe should provide the necessary assistance so that the problem can be solved.
Growth in global remittances, including those to developing countries, will slow sharply this year due to weak economic growth in Europe, deterioration of the Russian economy and the depreciation of the euro and ruble, according to the World Bank.
Two million UK citizens working abroad could become illegal immigrants overnight if Britain were to leave the European Union, former attorney general Dominic Grieve has warned.
“I don’t say it impolitely, but I say it directly: I don’t want to see you here again,” said Muriel Domenach, the French Consul General in Istanbul, talking about her conversations with visa-seeking Turks. Listening to her, one gets the feeling that she would like to say this to as many people as possible.
Britain would “fall apart” without immigration, a former senior Conservative minister has argued.