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| Ceuta - Melilla |
Ten years ago Spain spent more than 30 million euros building up the
barriers around Melilla and Ceuta, its two enclaves surrounded by Morocco on
the northern coast of Africa, which offer the only land borders between the
promise of Europe and the despair of Africa. And for a while the investment
seemed to work.
But in the past year, large groups of sub-Saharan immigrants have
been charging the rows of seven-yard-high chain-link fences here with
increasing frequency, or trying to swim around them, believing with good reason
that if they can just get past they will ultimately end up in Europe. They
often end up injured, not just from falls and the newly laid concertina wire,
but at the hands of the Moroccan and Spanish authorities trying to stop them.
