Morocco arrests 32 migrants heading to Spain

Migrants arrive on Spanish ground after crossing the fences separating the Spanish enclave of Melilla from Morocco in Melilla, in June 2022. (AP/File)
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Updated 28 October 2022
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Morocco arrests 32 migrants heading to Spain

  • 80 other migrants were sentenced to prison terms this week for illegal entry into Morocco
  • 978 people have died while trying to reach Spain so far this year, says Spanish rescue group

RABAT: Moroccan police on Friday arrested 32 migrants as they tried to set sail for Spain, authorities said, including six Moroccans and 26 from other African nations to the south.
The group were arrested on the coast with an inflatable boat near the southern town of Tantan, which lies some 100 kilometers (60 miles) from Spain’s Canary Islands, the DGSN security service said.
At least 11,500 migrants made their way to the Canary Islands this year, according to Spain.
Caminando Fronteras, a Spanish group that helps migrant boats in trouble at sea and families searching for missing relatives, says 978 people have died while trying to reach Spain so far this year.
Moroccan police have arrested dozens of migrants as well as several people smugglers since June, when some 2,000 mostly Sudanese nationals tried to enter the Spanish enclave of Melilla.
At least 23 people died in the attempt, the worst toll in years of such attempted crossings, and rights groups accused both Spanish and Moroccan authorities of using excessive force.
The Spanish enclaves of Melilla and Ceuta have long been a magnet for people fleeing violence and poverty across Africa hoping to find a better life in Europe.
According to Morroco’s AMDH rights group, around 80 migrants of various nationalities were sentenced to prison terms this week ranging from two to four months in jail for illegally entering the North African kingdom.

 


Jailed Kurdish militant boss says peace laws needed for democratic integration in Turkiye 

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Jailed Kurdish militant boss says peace laws needed for democratic integration in Turkiye 

  • That landmark ⁠call fueled ‌hopes ‌for an ​end ‌to a conflict that ‌has killed more than 40,000 people, sowed deep divisions and ‌stymied development in mainly Kurdish southeast ⁠Turkiye
ANKARA: Jailed militant leader Abdullah Ocalan said ​on Friday that peace-related laws were needed for a transition to democratic integration in Turkiye, ‌in a statement ‌read ​out ‌a ⁠year ​after he ⁠called on his Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) to end its decades-old insurgency and disband.
That landmark ⁠call fueled ‌hopes ‌for an ​end ‌to a conflict that ‌has killed more than 40,000 people, sowed deep divisions and ‌stymied development in mainly Kurdish southeast ⁠Turkiye, ⁠but progress has been slow. Ocalan’s statement was read out at a press conference by the pro-Kurdish DEM Party.