Procuration Consulat Maroc 【UPDATED】
Mme. Leila stopped. She pushed her glasses up. “Scanned? No, Mademoiselle. For a procuration at the consulate, the principal—your father—must appear in person before an officer, or we must receive a notarized original from Morocco. We do not accept pixels.”
Her father was in Marrakech. He had finally bought the riad he’d dreamed of for thirty years, but the seller was threatening to back out. The signing was in 48 hours. Yasmine couldn’t fly down; she had a presentation. So, she needed the consulate to authenticate a power of attorney allowing her cousin in Casablanca to sign the deed in her father’s name.
He tipped his wool cap and disappeared into the metro, leaving Yasmine clutching the procuration —a simple piece of paper that held the weight of a house, a father’s dream, and a stranger’s kindness. procuration consulat maroc
“Dossier?” asked the security guard.
Yasmine blinked. “The what?”
Yasmine’s heart dropped. “But he’s bedridden. He has a bad back. The flight is impossible.”
Omar chuckled. “You young people. You think we old ones don’t know the internet. Since COVID, the Moroccan administration created a video verification system for procurations for those who cannot travel. If the consulate here has the equipment, your father can appear via secure video link from a registered notary’s office in Marrakech. He signs on a tablet. The notary prints. The consulate here witnesses.” “Scanned
“Thank you,” she said. “I thought I had lost the riad.”



