Description
Added on the 21/05/2021 14:00:00 - Copyright : EFE Inglés
Dozens of migrants queue at Spain's Ceuta border to return to Morocco after an unprecedented 8,000 people crossed into the Spanish enclave earlier this week. Most of the arrivals are young men and teenagers, who swam to the beaches of Ceuta to find work and escape the grinding poverty, unemployment and hunger back home in Morocco which has been worsened by the Covid pandemic. IMAGES
Castillejos, May 19 (EFE) .- Around three hundred Moroccan migrants staged riots Wednesday night and confronted the police while trying to cross the police deployment in Castillejos, almost a kilometer from the main road to the Spanish North African city of Ceuta. (Camera : MOHAMED SIALI)SHOT LIST: RIOTS IN CASTILLEJOS, MOROCCO.
Ceuta (Spain), May 19 (EFE). (Camera: Juan Chicano) .- The Ceuta border between Morocco and Spain dawned this Wednesday with only a few dozen immigrants trying to swim, a situation that differs from the registered two days ago, when people began to arrive from the neighboring country that reached 8,000, half of which have been returned, according to the Spanish Government.FOOTAGE OF THE SITUATION IN THE BORDER BETWEEN SPAIN AND MOROCCO
Migrants arriving from Morocco to Ceuta, Spain are met with force by police, as they wade through the water and arrive on the beach. Since Monday morning, a record 8,000 migrants have reached the beaches of Ceuta, a tiny enclave bordered by Morocco, and one of two only land borders between the European Union and Africa. IMAGES
Castillejos, May 18 (EFE).- Hundreds of migrants from Morocco continued Monday night to cross border to the Spanish city of Ceuta, during an unstoppable wave of migration in which 5,000 migrants have been reported to have entered the Spanish border in the last 24 hours. (Camera: MOHAMED SIALI).SHOT LIST: MIGRANTS CROSS BORDER TO SPANISH CITY OF CEUTA, IN CASTILLEJOS, MOROCCO.