Girl, 7, swept out to sea on holiday in Morocco

BBC | 29.01.2026 21:35

A seven-year-old British girl is missing after being swept out to sea on the first day of a family holiday in Morocco.

Inaayah Makda, from Blackburn in Lancashire, was hit by a large wave as she and her parents sat on rocks on a beach in Casablanca on Wednesday, her family have said.

Her parents Zubair and Tasneem Makda were also knocked into the sea but lost sight of their daughter.

A family member said the couple had spent hours on the beach screaming her name but had received little help from the authorities.

Zubair and Tasneem, described as hard-working professionals, were on their first night of a week-long family holiday when it happened.

A relative, who did not wish to be named, said the tide appeared to be a long way out when they first arrived on the beach but came in very quickly - within about 20 minutes - catching them by surprise.

"There were no warnings or signs there for tourists," she said.

'We're devastated'

The family ended up cut off and surrounded by water, when a wave knocked Inaayah one way and her parents the other, the relative said.

She disappeared from view before her father could reach her.

The parents, who are still in Casablanca, have reportedly turned to a private search operator with a helicopter to assist with the search.

A neighbour of the family, who did not wish to be named, told the BBC Inaayah, a pupil at Roe Lee Park Primary School in Blackburn, was a "lovely, bubbly, cheeky little girl".

She said she was the only child of her "hardworking" parents, and was "their whole world".

"We're all just in shock, we're devastated," she said.

Blackburn MP Adnan Hussein said he was "heartbroken" by the incident and had been in touch with Inaayah's family.

He said: "I am urgently raising this matter with the UK authorities, including the Foreign Office, to ensure every possible step is being taken to support the search efforts and to provide the family with all the assistance they require at this deeply distressing time."

The Foreign Office has been contacted for comment.