Bangkok Post

AU seeks probe into ‘degrading’ border saga

-

NAIROBI: The African Union Commission chief has voiced shock at the “violent and degrading” treatment of African migrants trying to cross from Morocco into Spain after 23 people died, and called for an investigat­ion into the incident.

About 2,000 migrants stormed the heavily fortified border between the Moroccan region of Nador and the Spanish enclave of Melilla on Friday.

At least 23 migrants died and 140 police officers were wounded in the ensuing violence, according to Moroccan authoritie­s. It was the heaviest toll in years from such attempts to cross the frontier at Melilla.

“I express my deep shock and concern at the violent and degrading treatment of African migrants attempting to cross an internatio­nal border from Morocco into Spain,” AU Commission chief Moussa Faki Mahamat said in a statement on Twitter.

“I call for an immediate investigat­ion into the matter and remind all countries of their obligation­s under internatio­nal law to treat all migrants with dignity and to prioritise their safety and human rights, while refraining from the use of excessive force.”

Kenya’s ambassador to the United Nations, Martin Kimani, said a UN Security Council meeting would be held behind closed doors to discuss the violence African migrants face in Melilla. According to diplomats, the session, originally planned for Monday, was postponed to today.

Kenya, Gabon and Ghana — the African non-permanent members of the Security Council — called for the meeting, Mr Kimani added.

“Migrants are Migrants: whether from Africa or Europe, they do not

deserve to be brutalised in this way,” he wrote on Twitter.

Speaking at a regular press briefing, UN chief Antonio Guterres’s spokesman Stephane Dujarric said: “We very much deplore this tragic incident and the loss of life.”

Spain on Monday thanked Morocco for its “collaborat­ion” in the defence of Spanish borders and once again blamed “internatio­nal mafias that traffic human beings” for the incident.

But calls for a serious probe have increased, with around 50 migrant rights groups calling the Melilla deaths “the tragic symbol of European policies to externalis­e the European Union’s borders”.

“The death of these young Africans... alerts us to the deadly nature of the security cooperatio­n on migration between Morocco and Spain,” they added.

Spain’s rights ombudsman said it accepted a complaint from several nongovernm­ental groups on the incident and has requested informatio­n from the relevant administra­tive bodies.

Moroccan justice will prosecute 65 migrants, mostly Sudanese, who took part in the attempt to force their way into the Spanish enclave, a defence lawyer in Rabat said in a statement on Monday.

The prosecutor’s office in Nador, which borders Melilla, has charged 37 migrants with “illegal entry into Morocco”, “violence against law enforcemen­t officers”, “armed gathering” and “refusal to comply”, their lawyer Khalid Ameza told AFP.

A second group of 28 migrants will be tried for “participat­ion in a criminal gang with a view to organising and facilitati­ng illegal immigratio­n abroad”, Mr Ameza added.

The lawyer said the majority of the defendants were from Darfur, in western Sudan, which is in the grips of a food crisis and has seen recent violence that has left more than 125 people dead and 50,000 displaced.

The others charged are Chadian, Malian and Yemeni.

The deadly migrant rush in Melilla on Friday came after Madrid and Rabat normalised their diplomatic relations following an almost year-long crisis centred on the disputed Western Sahara territory.

For Spain, the main objective of the diplomatic thaw was to ensure Morocco’s cooperatio­n in controllin­g illegal immigratio­n.

Spain’s enclaves in Morocco, Melilla and Ceuta are the only land borders the European Union shares with the African continent.

 ?? AFP ?? A Sudanese migrant at the temporary centre for immigrants and asylum seekers in Melilla, near the Moroccan city of Nador on Sunday.
AFP A Sudanese migrant at the temporary centre for immigrants and asylum seekers in Melilla, near the Moroccan city of Nador on Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand