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Morocco receives first batch of Turkish armed drones: Report

Rabat said to have ordered 13 Bayraktar TB2 drones in April, with the first delivery of unmanned aircraft arriving earlier this month
The Bayraktar TB2 is a medium altitude long endurance tactical unmanned aerial vehicle, according to its manufacturer (AFP)

Morocco took delivery earlier this month of Turkish combat drones, the Far-Maroc unofficial website dedicated to military news reported.

The report was also carried by several local media outlets and comes as tensions have spiked between Morocco and neighbouring Algeria in recent weeks.

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The two countries are mainly at odds over the disputed Western Sahara territory. 

Algeria severed ties with Morocco in August, claiming "provocations and hostile" action by its neighbour.

Relations took another blow this week when Algeria on Wednesday said it had closed off its airspace to all Moroccan civilian and military traffic.

Far-Maroc said Morocco ordered 13 Bayraktar TB2 drones from Turkey in April, and a first batch of the unmanned aircraft arrived this month.

'Armed attack missions'

According to the report, Rabat seeks to "modernise the arsenal of the Moroccan Armed Forces (FAR) in order to prepare for any danger and recent hostilities".

It said that Moroccan military personnel have trained in Turkey in recent weeks to work with the drones.

Media reports said Morocco signed a $70m contract with the private Turkish company Baykar.

The firm is run by one of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's son-in-laws and has also exported its Bayraktar TB2 model to Ukraine, Qatar and Azerbaijan for some years, AFP reported.

According to the company's website, the Bayraktar TB2 is a "medium altitude long endurance tactical unmanned aerial vehicle capable of conducting intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance and armed attack missions" with a range of up to 27 hours.

Referendum demand

Morocco already uses drones for intelligence and surveillance operations along its borders, according to military experts.

The Western Sahara dispute pits Morocco against the Algeria-backed Polisario Front, which fought a war of independence with Rabat from 1975 to 1991.

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Morocco laid claim to the former Spanish colony - with its rich phosphate resources and offshore fisheries - after Spain withdrew in 1975, and now controls around 80 percent of it.

Rabat has offered autonomy there and maintains the territory is a sovereign part of the kingdom, but the Polisario Front is demanding a referendum on self-determination, in line with the terms of a 1991 UN-backed ceasefire deal.

Tensions rose sharply in November, when Morocco sent troops into a buffer zone to reopen the only road linking Morocco to Mauritania and the rest of West Africa. The road had been blocked by the separatists.

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