Fnideq preparing to become an international trading pole, The end of Ceuta’s economy

With more than just the approaching shutdown of the Fnideq commercial zone, which will become an industrial and economic pole that will eventually contribute to the implementation and operation of the occupied regional economy, a suffocating crisis lurks on the surface of the sea of the seized city of Ceuta.

According to Spanish media, Moroccan could very well entice huge worldwide corporations to invest in all of these locations and establish outlets.

IKEA, for instance, is one of the first international corporations to formally proclaim stability in these new locations, providing the opportunity for so many other employees and revitalizing the northern region.

Instead of the occupied Ceuta warehouses, the Fnideq economic zone project is anticipated to have 33 warehouses of various sizes to hold imported goods through the Tangier Med-port, whether for re-export or distribution in the internal market.

Last Friday, a series of training classes were inaugurated for merchants interested in settling in Fnideq’s economic activity zone.

This training course, which will be held every Friday at 4 p.m., aims to educate traders with the administrative, customs, and legal procedures, as well as the privileges afforded by the Fnideq Economic Activity Zone, and how to operate them following its official debut in the coming weeks.

These courses are provided in collaboration with the northern provinces’ promotion and development agency, the Tangier Med special agency, the national Agency for the Promotion of Employment and Competence, the regional tax directorate, and the regional directorate of customs and excise taxes.

According to the Tangier-Tetouan-Hoceima Regional Investment Center’s Siham Benabdelnabi.

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