Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Mauritania receives EU funds to curb migration

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BARCELONA, Spain — The EU on Thursday announced $226,340,100 to help Mauritania crack down on people smugglers and deter migrant boats from taking off, as the number of people attempting the dangerous Atlantic crossing from West Africa to Europe rises sharply.

Mauritania, during a meeting with European officials in its coastal capital of Nouakchott, also noted that it was itself increasing­ly struggling to cope with the growing number of migrants and refugees entering its borders as security in the Sahel region declines.

European Union Commission President Ursula von der Leyen announced the extra funding for migration, but also for humanitari­an aid and job creation, as she met with Mauritania­n President Mohamed Ould Ghazouani and Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez.

“Insecurity and the lack of economic opportunit­y in the region are pushing many people to migrate,” Von der Leyen told journalist­s as she stood next to Ghazouani and Sánchez in a live-streamed statement. “This causes many to fall into the traps of cynical smugglers and puts their lives in danger.”

While Mauritania’s leader renewed his commitment to working with Spain and the EU to stop migrant departures he also highlighte­d the cost his country bore.

“Mauritania is paying a heavy price in the management of migratory flows,” Ghazouani said, adding that his nation already hosts 150,000 refugees from neighborin­g Mali and increasing­ly is not just a transit country but a destinatio­n for migrants.

One of the most stable countries in the Sahel, Mauritania has been hailed as a key partner in the fight against terrorism, and Von der Leyen announced an additional $23,711,820 for a new anti-terrorism battalion in Mauritania that will patrol the border with restive Mali.

“We are witnessing the fall of democratic government­s, rise of terrorist attacks, a spike in refugees and internally displaced people, and the worsening of an already acute food security crisis,” Sánchez said. “I am well aware that Mauritania is at the front line of all the consequenc­es.”

Spain’s Canary Islands have increasing­ly become a stepping stone for migrants and refugees trying to reach continenta­l Europe from West Africa. In January alone, some 7,270 migrants landed on the archipelag­o, about as many as in the first six months of 2023.

The Atlantic route to Europe is one of the deadliest in the world, Von der Leyen said. Indeed, it is not uncommon for entire boats to vanish in the Atlantic with a few sometimes reappearin­g months later on the other side of the ocean with no survivors.

The Canary Islands had already been struggling with a record number of arrivals last year with nearly 40,000 people arriving on its shores on boats mainly from Senegal. This year, departures from Mauritania, which had appeared to be under control for most of last year, have surged again.

Despite the presence of both Spanish and Mauritania­n patrols of the coast, the majority of this year’s migrant arrivals to the Canaries have departed from the impoverish­ed nation. While many of those arriving are citizens from Mali and Senegal, a growing number of young Mauritania­ns are also boarding boats.

Besides announcing more funds for migration and security, the two European leaders announced a series of financing and developmen­t projects for green hydrogen production in Mauritania as part of an EU energy transition initiative.

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