Tuesday, 25 February 2014

African migrants storm border fence in frantic bid to enter Spanish soil

Immigrants scale  a border fence that separates the Spanish enclave of Melilla from neighboring Morocco

Hundreds of sub-Saharan migrants armed with sticks and stones have stormed a six-metre high double barbed wire border fence in a bid to enter Spain's north-west African enclave of Melilla from Morocco.

About 100 of them made it across the border, Spanish and Moroccan officials said.
The spokeswoman for the Spanish Interior Ministry's office in Melilla said Moroccan guards trying to halt the migrants were attacked during the melee yesterday and had to take shelter.
Moroccan forces arrested 96 of the migrants, 14 of whom were hospitalised in the nearby city of Nador, according to a Moroccan Interior Ministry statement.
It said 13 security force members were injured by the stone-throwing migrants.
Immigrants are greeted by fellow immigrants at an immigrants holding center after scaling a border fence to enter the Spanish enclave Melilla from neighboring Morocco

Spain said 500 migrants were involved in the assault while Morocco put the figure at about 300. Melilla is surrounded by Morocco and the Mediterranean Sea. Migrants hoping to get to Europe camp on the Moroccan side, and several thousand try each year to enter the city and Spain's other coastal enclave of Ceuta.
In recent months Moroccan authorities have been trying to clear forest areas around the enclaves, moving the migrants to cities far from the border.
Yesterday's attempt came a week after 200 migrants tried to scale the Melilla fences, with 50 managing to make it across. Those that get across are normally placed in temporary accommodation while authorities try to repatriate them.
On February 6, at least 15 migrants drowned in Moroccan waters while trying to enter Ceuta by sea after several hundred tried to storm the enclave's border by land.
There are an estimated 25,000 sub-Saharan Africans living illegally in Morocco, most hoping to make their way to Europe.

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