Hundreds of migrants enter Spain from Morocco

Hundreds of migrants enter Spain from Morocco
Migrants sit on the ground after storming a fence to enter the Spanish enclave of Ceuta, Spain. (AP Photo/Jesus Moron)
Updated 17 February 2017
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Hundreds of migrants enter Spain from Morocco

Hundreds of migrants enter Spain from Morocco

MADRID: Hundreds of migrants stormed the border between Morocco and Spain at Ceuta on Friday, days after Morocco warned the EU of fresh migrant trouble following a row over a trade deal.
The Spanish civil guard — or paramilitary police — told AFP that “several hundred” migrants had stormed the border fence into the Spanish North African territory and that some had been injured.
Three officers were hurt while trying to keep the migrants back, a civil guard spoeksman said.
Footage shot by the local Faro de Ceuta television showed dozens of euphoric migrants wandering the streets of the seaside enclave, ecstatic to have finally crossed into a European Union state.
“I love you Mamma, long live Spain,” shouted one young African draped in a blue EU flag. “Libertad, libertad” (freedom), shouted another.
Ceuta and Melilla, also a Spanish territory in North Africa, have the EU’s only land borders with Africa, so are entry points for migrants who either climbing the border fence, swim along the coast or hide in vehicles.
Emergency services said on Twitter that 400 people were receiving assistance from the Spanish Red Cross.


The massive entry, one of the biggest since the border barrier was reinforced in 2005, comes amid a dispute between Morocco and the EU over the interpretation of a free trade farm and fishing deal.
In a late 2016 ruling, an EU court said the deal did not apply to the Western Sahara, a former Spanish colony controlled by Rabat where the Polisario Front is fighting for independence.
The court said this was because the status of the disputed territory remained unclear according to the international community.
The 28-nation bloc did not recognize it as part of Morocco.
The ruling opened the way for the Polisario Front and its supporters to contest trade in products from the Western Sahara between Morocco and the 28 EU states.
The decision angered Morocco, which in a warning on February 7 suggested it could lead to “a new flow of migration” toward Europe and place the continent “at risk.”
The last such massive attempt took place on New Year’s Day when more than 1,000 migrants tried to jump a high double fence between Morocco and Ceuta in a violent assault that saw one officer lose an eye.
The enclave has been ringed by a double wire fence that is eight kilometers (five miles) long. The six-meter (20-foot) high fence also has rolls of barbed wire.