Biodun Iginla, BBC News

Biodun Iginla, BBC News

Sunday, January 1, 2017

More than 1,000 migrants storm border at Spain's Ceuta


by Elodie Bagnol and Biodun Iginla, France24, Madrid


    © AFP/File | Migrants pictured on the ground in El Tarajal, Ceuta, close to the border with Morocco on December 9, 2016 after being rounded up by police to be attended to by Red Cross personnel

    MADRID - 
    More than 1,000 migrants tried to jump a high double fence between Morocco and the Spanish enclave of Ceuta on Sunday in a violent assault that saw one officer lose an eye, local authorities said.
    A group of 1,100 people from Sub-Saharan Africa trying to reach Europe stormed the border fence just after 4 am (0300 GMT) on New Year's Day in an "extremely violent and organised" way, said the central government's representative office in Ceuta.
    None however managed to get through bar two who were badly injured and taken to hospital in Ceuta, the office said in a statement. A similar assault on December 9 saw more than 400 migrants enter the tiny enclave.
    They tried "to force open some of the doors in the external fence, using iron bars, wire cutters and large stones with which they assaulted Moroccan forces and (Spanish) Guardia Civil (police) agents," it added.
    Five Spanish policemen and 50 members of the Moroccan forces were injured, including one who lost an eye, it said.
    Ceuta along with Melilla, another Spanish territory in North Africa, have the European Union's only land borders with Africa.
    They are one of the entry points for African migrants seeking a better life in Europe, who get there by either climbing over the border fence or by swimming along the coast.
    According to local authorities, of the 1,100 migrants who stormed the border, just over 100 managed to climb up the external fence and stayed on top for hours.
    Footage shot by the local Faro TV shows one man perched at the top of the six-metre (20-foot) high fence, sitting uncomfortably near rolls of barbed wire, his head hanging down onto his chest.
    Eventually as darkness turns to light, he slowly climbs down to a space between both fences and lies down as a Spanish policeman fetches him a bottle of water before taking him to an entry back into Morocco.
    Separately, coastguards said they had rescued 52 people who were packed onto a small boat at sea south of Malaga on Spain's southern coast.

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