Right organizations in Morocco and Spain have called for investigation into the death of at least eighteen Africans and dozens injured in the attempt to scale the border fence.
According to official report by Morocco in a statement on Friday, the casualties occurred when a “stampede” of people tried to climb the iron fence that separates Melilla and Morocco.
The call for investigation comes after Moroccan Human Rights Association shared videos on social media that appeared to show dozens of migrants lying on the ground, many of them motionless and a few bleeding, as Moroccan security forces stood over them.
Right group, Amnesty International In a statement released late Friday, expressed its “deep concern” over the events at the border.
“Although the migrants may have acted violently in their attempt to enter Melilla, when it comes to border control, not everything goes,” said Esteban Beltrán, the director of Amnesty International Spain. “The human rights of migrants and refugees must be respected and situations like that seen cannot happen again.”
Morocco’s Interior Ministry said 76 civilians were injured along with 140 Moroccan security officers.
Spain’s prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, while commenting on the accident on Saturday condemned what he described as a “violent assault” and an “attack on the territorial integrity” of Spain. Spanish officials said 49 Civil Guards sustained minor injuries.
A spokesperson for the Spanish government’s office in Melilla said that around 2,000 people had attempted to make it across the border fence but were stopped by Spanish Civil Guard Police and Moroccan forces on either side of the border fence. A total 133 migrants made it across the border.