13 people arrested as anti-migrant march in Cyprus turns violent

Shops were attacked during Friday’s racial violence in Limassol. (Social media)
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Updated 02 September 2023
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13 people arrested as anti-migrant march in Cyprus turns violent

  • President holds emergency meeting to discuss Limassol unrest with the police chief and justice and interior ministers

NICOSIA: Cyprus police said on Saturday they arrested 13 people when an anti-migrant march in the island’s second city, Limassol, turned violent with mobs vandalizing property.

Five people were injured during the unrest that broke out on Friday evening in the southern coastal city after about 500 people had taken to the streets for the march, the police said.
Trash bins were set alight and some shops were vandalized, police said, while eyewitnesses cited by Cypriot media outlets said some foreigners were attacked.
Police used water cannon to disperse the protesters, some of them hooded and holding a banner that read “Refugees not welcome.”
The violence came days after about 20 people were arrested during violent clashes between Cypriots and migrants near the western resort of Paphos, where authorities have started removing Syrians from a condemned apartment complex.

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Cyprus says it is a ‘front-line country’ on the Mediterranean migrant route, struggling to cope with an influx of irregular migrants.

EU member Cyprus says it is a “front-line country” on the Mediterranean migrant route, struggling to cope with an influx of irregular migrants.
The latest EU data shows Cyprus has the highest number of first-time asylum applications relative to population in the 27-member bloc.
Authorities said this week that migrants comprise an estimated six percent of the island’s population.
The bloc’s average is around one percent. Cyprus President Nikos Christodoulides held an emergency meeting Saturday to discuss the Limassol unrest with the police chief and his justice and interior ministers.
It is the second emergency meeting in a week after Tuesday’s session following the Paphos violence.
A visibly angry Christodoulides said: “There is not much that can be said other than the embarrassing images we have seen.
“They have nothing to do with dealing with immigration.
“If all those involved (in the Limassol incidents) loved or cared about our country, they would not have taken such actions which, above all, insult our country.”
Despite the tensions, the number of migrants applying for asylum in Cyprus dropped by 53 percent over a recent five-month period, according to Interior Ministry data.
More than 10,600 people applied for asylum from March to July 2022, compared with 4,976 in the same period this year, the figures showed.
But police data shows a rise in the number of migrants arriving by sea, with more than 500 landing on 45 small fishing boats or inflatable dinghies in the past three months, the vast majority from Syria.

 


Two high-speed trains derail in Spain, broadcaster reports seven people killed

Updated 40 min 50 sec ago
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Two high-speed trains derail in Spain, broadcaster reports seven people killed

  • The accident happened near Adamuz, which is near Cordoba

MADRID: Two high-speed trains derailed on Sunday in southern Spain, the rail network operator said, and state-run television channel RTVE said seven people had died, citing police sources.
The accident ​happened near Adamuz, in Cordoba province. Seven people have been confirmed dead by police, RTVE said, adding that 100 people have been injured, 25 seriously.
Spanish police did not immediately respond to request for comment from Reuters.
“The Iryo 6189 Malaga — (to Madrid) train has derailed from the track at Adamuz, crashing onto the adjacent track. The (Madrid) to Huelva train which was traveling on the adjacent track has also derailed,” said Adif, which runs the rail network, in a social media post.
Adif said the accident happened at 6:40 p.m. (1740 GMT), about ten minutes ‌after the Iryo ‌train left Cordoba heading toward Madrid.
Iryo is a private rail ‌operator, ⁠majority-owned ​by Italian state-controlled ‌railway group Ferrovie dello Stato. The train involved was a Freccia 1000 train which was traveling between Malaga and Madrid, a spokesperson for Ferrovie dello Stato said.
Iryo did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Adif has suspended all rail services between Madrid and Andalusia.
Andalusia emergency services said on social media that all rail traffic had been halted and emergency services were on their way, including at least nine ambulances and emergency support vehicles.

CALLS FOR MEDICS
A woman named Carmen posted on X that ⁠she had been on board the Iryo to Madrid. “Ten minutes after departing (from Cordoba) the train started to shake a lot, and ‌it derailed from coach 6 behind us. The lights went ‍out.”
Footage posted by another Iryo train ‍passenger, also on X, showed an Iryo staffer in a fluorescent jacket instructing passengers to remain ‍in their seats in the darkened carriages, and those with first aid training to keep watch over fellow passengers.
The staffer told passengers they would be evacuated when it was safe to leave, but at that moment the safest place was on the train. He also urged people to maintain mobile phone batteries ​to be able to use their torches when they disembarked.
The passenger wrote: “In our carriage we’re well but we don’t know about the other carriages. There’s ⁠smoke and they’re calling for a doctor.”
The regional government has activated emergency protocols to mobilize more resources to the accident site. Locals posted on social media that a building would be set up in the village nearest the crash for evacuated passengers to be taken to.
Salvador Jimenez, a journalist for RTVE who was on board the Iryo train, shared images showing the nose of the rear carriage of the train lying on its side, with evacuated passengers sitting on the side of the carriage facing upwards.
Jimenez told TVE by phone from beside the stricken trains that passengers had used emergency hammers to smash the windows and climb out, and they had seen two people taken out of the overturned carriages on stretchers.
“There’s a certain uncertainty about when we’ll get to Madrid, ‌where we’ll spend the night, we’ve had no message from the train company yet,” he said. “It’s very cold but here we are.”