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Spain: refugees killed, survivors abandoned in Moroccan desert
By Paul Stuart
22 October 2005
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For weeks European television news reports have showed images
of bloody and battered migrants attempting to scale the militarized
fence separating Morocco from the Spanish colonial outposts of
Ceuta and Melilla. Five were shot to death while trying to scale
the border fence to get into Ceuta and six more died in clashes
with Moroccan and Spanish security forces in Melilla.
This is the brutal and tragic end for people who have endured
terrifying 2,400-mile trips from the poorest sub-Saharan African
countries such as Cameroon, Niger, Mali and Burkina Faso. Many
migrants have travelled up to two years to escape from civil wars,
dictatorships, droughts and famine only to be beaten by Moroccan
and Spanish border troops and forcibly repatriated. Human rights
organizations have described this policy as a breach of the Geneva
Convention on the treatment of refugees.
A report on SignonSandiego.com described the experiences of
one refugee en route to Morocco, Along the way, he saw the
unspeakablemen so thirsty they drank their own urine, then
begged others for theirs, hunger bordering on madness, skin cracking
under a searing sun, horrendous, gushing nosebleeds.... Next came
18 months in a hillside pine forest in Morocco, hiding from baton-wielding
police by day, sneaking out at night to eat from trash cans and
dodging bandits. His destination, this Spanish enclave on North
Africas coast...
The European Union (EU) has financed the militarization of
the Spanish border with Africa as part of its Fortress Europe
strategy. On October 11, Amnesty International published a press
release saying, The present dire situation in North Africa,
where people trying to gain entry to EU territory are reportedly
being shot dead, or even dumped in the desert without food or
water, relates directly to pressure exerted by EU countries to
strengthen fortress Europe.
EU Justice and Security Commissioner Franco Frattini heightened
tensions by telling EU ministers, according to a copy of his speech
notes, Intelligence suggests that around 20,000 immigrants
are waiting in Algeria ready to begin their journey to Morocco
and then Ceuta and Melilla with another 10,000 already waiting
in Morocco.
Frattini responded to Spains request for more assistance,
adding that we are going to send the message to the Moroccans
that Europe stands ready to commit itself very quickly on the
ground as well, but Europe requires a strong and clear commitment
on the part of Morocco.
Spain and the EU have steadily choked off all unofficial routes
into Europe for the most impoverished, with joint naval patrols
cutting off access to the Spanish mainland via the Mediterranean
and Atlantic Ocean. Since 1997 conservative estimates put migrant
deaths by drowning at more than 4,000. Many of the boats are unsafe
and overcrowded and suspicions abound that Spanish naval security
has ignored boats in distress despite having some of the most
advanced radar systems in the world.
According to eyewitness accounts from Melilla, Spains
notorious Civil Guard beat those who managed to get onto the Spanish
side of the fence and forcibly repatriated those it
captured. The injured and dying were literally picked up, a gate
in the border fence was opened and they were dumped in Morocco
at the mercy of troops. Spanish authorities have refused to condemn
or investigate the conduct of the Civil Guard and have instead
praised their professionalism under duress. Abdela Bendhiba, Moroccan
governor of Nador, described his troops actions as within
the bounds of legitimate self-defence.
Those who scaled the fence and later gave themselves up expecting
to be treated under the statutes of the Geneva Convention now
face immediate deportation back to Morocco by the Spanish authorities.
Wolfgang Grenz of Amnesty International stated, It would
be a fatal decision that Spain opts out of obligations to the
Geneva Convention on protection of refugees.
Responding to the scenes broadcast on Spanish television, the
Socialist Party (PSOE) prime minister of Spain, Jose Luiz Zapatero,
sent 500 more soldiersnot to relieve the humanitarian crisis
but to reinforce the security of Spains border,
proclaiming this his top priority. Zapatero had already ordered
the perimeter fence to be doubled to a height of six meters. According
to one report the authorities approached high-tech specialists
in corporate security systems to use the latest technology to
track the movement of migrants along the border fence.
The Spanish government is resurrecting its 1992 accord signed
with Morocco and has demanded more finance from the EU. The revived
accord allows the expulsion of illegal entrants back
to Morocco, even if they are of different nationality. Zapatero
said of reviving this accord, We are going to begin repatriations
to Morocco.... Thats something which has never happened
before but now it will happen.
After visiting Melilla, Deputy Prime Minister Maria Teresa
Fernandez de la Vega was unrepentant. In the coming hours,
probably tomorrow or the next day, illegal immigrants will be
returned to Morocco, she said.
Interior Minister Javier Antonio Alonso was reported to have
threatened, The message for immigrants without papers must
be clear: those who come in leave immediately.
French-based Doctors without Borders (MSF) has filed an urgent
request to the Spanish government to respect the rights of refugees
and suspend its program of forced repatriations to Morocco. Its
request was rejected, and a flight left Spain for Tangiers on
October 7, the first of many planned repatriations.
Refugees abandoned in the desert
Doctors without Borders says it has evidence that Moroccan
troops are forcing refugees, including children, pregnant women
and the injured, onto buses and abandoning them to die in the
remote desert between Morocco and Algeria. According to the charity,
the buses were hired by the Moroccan Interior Ministry. Doctors
without Borders spokesman Carlos Ugarte reported, We are
hearing that the Moroccan police took them away in the direction
of the southwest ... that is the desert.... The camp (containing
the other nationalities) is no longer there and there are signs
there was a struggle.
El Pais interviewed Javier Gabaldon, a Spanish doctor.
The immigrants situation is awful, he said.
Aside from the injuries caused by the fence wires and the
bruises from the Moroccan and Spanish policeof which there
are manyabout 80 of them are starving and suffering from
thirst. We have distributed 400 litres of water and 180 packets
of cookies and we have had to do this carefully because they were
clawing at us for food. They have been robbed of everything on
this route, and they survive only due to the compassion of the
local villagers.
SOS Racismo spokeswoman Elena Maleno told Spanish state radio
that they had located three convoys taking people into the desert
on Sunday. One is made up of nine buses, in another there
are seven and the other left from Tangiers with several buses
including one full of women and babies.
Eyewitness Guy-Rostand Tembon described what happened: The
Moroccans marched us off buses at night, some 20 kilometres from
the Algerian border.... They hit us and women and youngsters were
attacked. Then we walked towards the borderbut the Algerians
were waiting for us with guns trained on us.... We are desperate.
Please do something for us.... Were in a holewe dont
know where to go. The women are sick. Algeria refuses to let us
in and the first town of Oujda is 500 kilometres away.
The Independent reported that after severe criticism
from human rights organizations, Moroccan authorities began rounding
up those it had earlier abandoned. On Saturday, convoys
of Moroccan police and military vehicles were transporting the
Africans yet again, to Oujda on Moroccos northern border
with Algeria, where Senegalese and Malians were to be flown home....
The fate of Africans from other countries, however, remained unclear,
amid reports they were to be trucked to the western Sahara and
abandoned yet again, to die of hunger and thirst, the newspaper
reported.
A crime against humanity
Anti-immigrant hysteria is being whipped up on both sides of
the border, with one Moroccan newspaper report headlined, Black
locusts invade the north of Morocco.
Enrique Santiago, secretary general of the Spanish Commission
for Assistance to Refugees (CEAR), described the repressive measures
by Moroccan troops that led to a humanitarian crisis in the African
encampments.
The Moroccan government is working with the Spanish on
immigration control and has started to use methods which fail
to respect national accords in relation to human rights,
he said. This has led to a systematic harassment of the
camps where sub-Saharan immigrants hide out on the other side
of the border.
Interviewed in El Pais, Abu Baber from Mali described
the circumstances that led to the desperate scenes. Until
a few months ago, the Moroccan soldiers would come to the camp
with their sticks once a month. But for the last few weeks its
been three times a day.
Beri Amudi from Guinea-Bissau told the newspaper how troops
had so tightly surrounded them that they couldnt get drinking
water, People started to drink from the stream but they
became ill. In the end the guys from Doctors without Borders came
and made the agents let us drink. I thought we were going to die
of thirst.
Esteban Beltran, Amnesty Internationals director for
Spain, added that the authorities expelled the immigrants without
identifying them or considering their possible status, in violation
of the Geneva Convention, which also forbids the expulsion of
any person to a country where they could be subjected to torture
or inhuman or degrading treatment. Torture and bad treatment
is endemic in Morocco, he said.
Beltran described the implications of policies pursued by Spain
and Morocco:
No immigrant can be deported unless he has been identified,
with a lawyer present, and his case heard. Collective expulsions
are contrary to international law and, if carried out with violence
and the prospect of death, could be considered a crime against
humanity.
See Also:
Young African workers killed in Spanish
enclave
[3 October 2005]
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