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Morocco

Im-Fout concentration camp

Low
Verified 29 May 2026
Fresh · 0d ago

Data is aggregated from public sources and may be incomplete or out of date. Always verify with primary sources before acting on any figure. See data sources.

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How to send mail, money, and visit Im-Fout concentration camp

Step-by-step guidance using the Morocco system — addresses, money services, visit booking, what to bring on your first visit.

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Photograph of Im-Fout concentration camp
Photo via Wikimedia Commons

Gallery

From Wikimedia Commons (CC-BY-SA where not otherwise stated).

  • An unidentified worker walks by the railroad tracks at the Im Fout labor camp in Morocco.jpg

    Photo by Unknown authorUnknown author via Wikimedia Commons (Public domain)

  • Close-up portrait of Dunn, an Irish prisoner, drying off near the river at the Im Fout labor camp in Morocco.jpg

    Photo by Unknown authorUnknown author via Wikimedia Commons (Public domain)

  • Close-up portrait of two prisoners in the Im Fout labor camp in Morocco.jpg

    Photo by Unknown authorUnknown author via Wikimedia Commons (Public domain)

  • Portrait of Sami Dorra working at dam construction in the Im Fout labor camp.jpg

    Photo by Unknown authorUnknown author via Wikimedia Commons (Public domain)

  • Rosenthal, a German Jewish prisoner, pushes a cart in the stone quarry of the Im Fout labor camp in Morocco.jpg

    Photo by Unknown authorUnknown author via Wikimedia Commons (Public domain)

  • Two prisoners stand by the river and smoke pipes at the Im Fout labor camp in Morocco.jpg

    Photo by Unknown authorUnknown author via Wikimedia Commons (Public domain)

  • View of the dam being built in the Im Fout labor camp in Morocco.jpg

    Photo by Unknown authorUnknown author via Wikimedia Commons (Public domain)

Background

The Im Fout labor camp was a forced labor camp established by 1941 by Vichy France near the construction site of the Im Fout Dam on the Oum Er-Rbia River in Morocco, at the time a French protectorate. Most of Im Fout's prisoners were political prisoners, demobilized soldiers, former military volunteers, and "undesirables" classified as "foreign workers" (Groupement de travailleurs étrangers (GTE)) by the Department of Industrial Production (Direction de la Production Industrielle) in Rabat. The Im Fout cohort was designated as GTE No. 9. Im Fout was the main center for demobilized soldiers and former war volunteers designated as "foreign workers" in Axis-occupied North Africa.

Source: Wikipedia article lead, CC-BY-SA.

Capacity

Current population

Occupancy

Year opened

Operational

Facility profile

Operator

Population held

Mixed/unknown

Opened

Region

Security level

Death-row facility

No

Conditions

No conditions summary available yet.

Visiting

No visiting information available.

Mailing

No mailing information available.

Practical info

Contact the operator's website for inmate-specific procedures.

Known issues

No major issues documented in our database.

Contact & address

No public contact details available.

Conditions Risk Score

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Insufficient data
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Data completeness

16%

How many of our profile fields are populated. We surface this so families and researchers know the limits.

Sources