A gale is battering the temporary immigration offices at the Moroccan border. It's threatening to tear off pieces of corrugated iron and rip plywood doors from their hinges. On the other side of the street to the offices, past crowds of people running for shelter across the tarmac alive with whirls of dust, stands the Fazer. It's parked in the shelter of the most precarious Portakabin toilet block in the history of the Moroccan Immigration. Just then, a sail of tarpaulin slides off the roof and begins to pull heartily at the prefab privy. From a place near the front of a 30-minute long queue for passport signing, my heart starts racing. I look from the precarious building to the line of buffeted people stretching out behind me. What's more important: saving the bike from being basted by digested paella and tagine, or keeping a place in this God-forsaken queue?