El Dorado News-Times

Groups in Spain and Morocco push for border deaths inquiry

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MADRID (AP) — Human rights organizati­ons in Spain and Morocco have called on both countries to investigat­e the deaths of at least 18 Africans and injuries suffered by dozens more who attempted to scale the border fence that surrounds Melilla, a Spanish enclave in North Africa.

Moroccan authoritie­s said the casualties occurred when a “stampede” of people tried to climb the iron fence that separates Melilla and Morocco. In a statement released Friday, Morocco’s Interior Ministry said 76 civilians were injured along with 140 Moroccan security officers.

Local authoritie­s cited by Morocco’s official MAP news agency said the death toll increased to 18 after several migrants died in the hospital. The Moroccan Human Rights Associatio­n reported 27 dead, but the figure could not immediatel­y be confirmed.

Speaking on Saturday, Spain’s prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, condemned what he described as a “violent assault” and an “attack on the territoria­l integrity” of Spain. Spanish officials said 49 Civil Guards sustained minor injuries.

“if there is anyone responsibl­e for everything that appears to have taken place at that border, it is the mafias that traffic in human beings,” Sánchez added.

His remarks came as the Moroccan Human Rights Associatio­n shared videos on social media that appeared to show dozens of migrants lying on the ground, many of them motionless and a few bleeding, as Moroccan security forces stood over them.

“They were left there without help for hours, which increased the number of deaths,” the human rights group said on Twitter. It called for a “comprehens­ive” investigat­ion.

In another of the associatio­n’s videos, a Moroccan security officer appeared to use a baton to strike a person lying on the ground.

In a statement released late Friday, Amnesty Internatio­nal expressed its “deep concern” over the events at the border.

“Although the migrants may have acted violently in their attempt to enter Melilla, when it comes to border control, not everything goes,” said Esteban Beltrán, the director of Amnesty Internatio­nal Spain. “The human rights of migrants and refugees must be respected and situations like that seen cannot happen again.”

Five rights organizati­ons in Morocco and APDHA, a human rights group based in the southern Spanish region of Andalusia, also called for inquiries.

In a statement published Saturday, the Spanish Commission for Refugees, CEAR, decried what it described as “the indiscrimi­nate use of violence to manage migration and control borders” and expressed concerns that the violence had prevented people who were eligible for internatio­nal protection from reaching Spanish soil.

The Catholic Church in the southern Spanish city of Malaga also expressed its dismay over the events. “Both Morocco and Spain have chosen to eliminate human dignity on our borders, maintainin­g that the arrival of migrants must be avoided at all costs and forgetting the lives that are torn apart along the way,” it said in a statement penned by a delegation of the diocese that focuses on migration in Malaga and Melilla.

A spokespers­on for the Spanish government’s office in Melilla said that around 2,000 people had attempted to make it across the border fence but were stopped by Spanish Civil Guard Police and Moroccan forces on either side of the border fence. A total 133 migrants made it across the border.

The mass crossing attempt was the first since Spain and Morocco mended relations after a year-long dispute related to Western Sahara, a former Spanish colony annexed by Morocco in 1976. The thaw in relations came after Spain backed Morocco’s plan to grant more autonomy to the territory, a reversal of its previous support for a U.N.backed referendum on the status of Western Sahara.

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