Fortress Europe's culpability for the Melilla massacre

The border wall between Morocco and Melilla. Photograph: Jesús Blasco de Avellaneda People sit on top of a fence as they attempt to reach Melilla from Morocco in 2014. Photograph: Francisco G Guerrero/EPA Riot police detain people at the Barrio Chino border crossing between Morocco and Melilla on 24 June 2022. Photograph: Javier Bernardo/AP

Official figures from that day indicate that of the roughly 1,700 migrants who attempted to cross the border, 133 were able to claim asylum; 470 individuals, like Basir, entered Spanish territory, but were forcibly returned to Morocco. At least 37 people died, and 77 people remain unaccounted for. The event quickly came to be known as “the Melilla massacre”.

The Melilla massacre: how a Spanish enclave in Africa became a deadly flashpoint - The Guardian

Ben Harris-Roxas @ben_hr