Spain speeds up Ceuta expulsions after migrant tide from Morocco ebbs
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[May 19, 2021]
By Jon Nazca and Mariano Valladolid
CEUTA, Spain (Reuters) - Spanish
authorities carried out mass expulsions of migrants on Wednesday from
its North African enclave of Ceuta after thousands crossed from Morocco,
as the tide of humanity swimming around the border fence turned into a
trickle.
Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said as many as 4,800 of the more than
8,000 who entered Ceuta during the previous two days had been sent back,
and security forces on both sides intervened to prevent more from
crossing.
"We are carrying out the immediate handover of those who have entered
irregularly," Sanchez told parliament.
On Wednesday morning, Spanish soldiers in combat gear and police
officers were escorting some swimmers directly back to Morocco, while
Moroccan police drove hundreds of young man away from the border fence.
The Spanish enclave's leader had earlier accused Moroccan authorities of
failing to police their side of the border actively, and linked that to
a decision by Madrid to admit a rebel leader from Western Sahara, a
territory held by Morocco, to a Spanish hospital for treatment.
On Wednesday Morocco's minister of state for human rights, El Mustapha
Ramid, suggested Rabat had a right to relax border controls over the
hospitalisation of Polisario leader Brahim Ghali.
"What did Spain expect from Morocco, which sees its neighbour hosting
the head of a group that took up arms against the kingdom?" he said in a
Facebook post.
"Morocco has the right to lean back and stretch its
legs... so that Spain knows that underestimating Morocco is costly," he
added.
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A Spanish soldier assists a Moroccan citizen at El Tarajal beach,
near the fence between the Spanish-Moroccan border, after thousands
of migrants swam across the border, in Ceuta, Spain, May 19, 2021.
REUTERS/Jon Nazca
Sanchez did not make that connection, calling the north African
nation a friend of Spain, while the interior ministry praised
Morocco's cooperation over the migrant readmissions.
Foreign Minister Arancha Gonzalez Laya said on Wednesday morning in
a radio interview that Spain has always been "exquisitely prudent"
regarding Western Sahara.
She said Spain never intended to give Ghali's hospitalisation "an
aggressive character".
Rabat recalled its ambassador to Madrid for consultations, said a
diplomatic source who declined to be named, adding that relations
with Spain needed a moment of "contemplation". Moroccan authorities
did not respond to requests for comment.
The crisis between the two countries is the most serious since a
territorial spat over the islet of Perejil in 2002.
(Reporting by Inti Landauro and Cristina Galan in Madrid; editing by
John Stonestreet)
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