Guidelines

Does Morocco want the Canary Islands?

Does Morocco want the Canary Islands?

Morocco has no claim to the Canary islands, they have never occupied the territory.

Who controls Melilla Ceuta?

Spain
15th Century: Melilla conquered by Spain. 17th Century: Ceuta comes under Spanish rule. 1956: Spain retains Ceuta and Melilla after Morocco becomes independent.

When did Morocco invade Spain?

Hispano-Moroccan War (1859–1860)

Date 22 October 1859 – 26 April 1860
Location Northern Morocco
Result Spanish victory Treaty of Wad Ras: Morocco recognizes Spanish sovereignty over Ceuta and Melilla Retrocession of Santa Cruz de la Mar Pequeña (moot location) to Spain pays war reparations of 20 million duros

Does Melilla have an airport?

Melilla Airport (IATA: MLN, ICAO: GEML) is an airport located in Melilla, an enclave of Spain in Africa.

Why did Spain build the Ceuta and Melilla walls?

For this reason, Spain decided to build two barriers of 3 feet high: 8 km long in Ceuta and 12 km long in Melilla. These walls separate the two Spanish autonomous cities from Morocco. They remind the Berlin Wall built on 13 August 1961, by East Germany to divide it from West Germany.

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Is Melilla turning into a port of despair?

Melilla, from the port of hope, is becoming the port of despair. Last February, 15 migrants drowned trying to swim across the strip that separates Morocco from Melilla, but also from Ceuta [5]. First, there was the sea, now there is also the existence of a solid wall that continuously creates animosity between Morocco and Spain [6].

What happens to the wounded at the Spanish-Moroccan border?

The wounded arrive daily in the hospitals of Ceuta and Melilla with lesions and cuts of various kinds. In particular, the immigrants present legs and heads broken by the brutality of the security forces guarding the border and ready to launch an attack.

What is the impact of the Ceuta fence on immigrants?

This highlights a clear adverse climate towards immigrants [4]. The Sub-Saharan represent another high percentage of immigration in the coast of Ceuta and Melilla. For example, in March 2014, about 150 Sub-Saharan migrants tried to cross the fence but only 20 succeeded. At the dawn of the same day, another 700 were rejected by the Civil Guard.