100 African migrants force way into Spain's Melilla
Some 500 African migrants stormed a triple barbed-wire
border fence Monday that divides the Spanish territory of Melilla from Morocco,
with about 100 making it over, an official said.
The migrants targeted two different sections of the border
and were "very violent" as they used "sticks and threw rocks at
Spanish and Moroccan police", said a spokeswoman for the Spanish
government's representative in Melilla.
About 100 of the roughly 500 migrants involved in the border
assault managed to enter Melilla, she added.
The Moroccan interior ministry said at least 27 people had
been wounded, including 13 members of its security forces hit by rocks that the
migrants hurled at them as they stormed the border fence.
Moroccan police arrested around 100 migrants, including 14
who were taken to hospital in the nearby town of Nador suffering injuries
caused by the barbed wire that the Spanish authorities have placed on top of
the barrier as a deterrent.
It was the latest in a series of coordinated assaults by
African migrants on the border of Melilla, which along with fellow Spanish
territory Ceuta has the European Union's only land borders with Africa.
The two cities sit across the Mediterranean from mainland
Spain, surrounded by Moroccan territory.
On February 17 about 150 African migrants made it into
Melilla in another mass assault by migrants bearing sticks and stones.
At least 14 migrants drowned in Moroccan waters on February
6 while trying to enter Ceuta by sea after several hundred tried to storm the
land border.
Spain's interior ministry on Friday posted videos online
showing police firing rubber bullets as the migrants swam into Spanish
territory from Morocco, but denied this action contributed to the drowning of
the migrants.
The spike in the arrival of migrants to Melilla in recent
weeks has caused the population of an internment centre in the Spanish outpost
to swell.
The centre, which has room for 480 people, currently houses
more than 1,000 migrants. Military tents have been set up at the centre to
accomodate the overflow.
Depending on treaties between Spain and the country of
origin of each immigrant, some are repatriated and others are allowed into
Spain.
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