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MIGRATION

350 rescued off Spain’s Canary Islands after fatal migrant shipwreck

Emergency services in the Spanish Canary Islands said Thursday they had saved at least 350 migrants in five separate vessels over the last 24 hours off the Canary Islands.

350 rescued off Spain's Canary Islands after fatal migrant shipwreck
The migrants found near Gran Canaria were all taken to hospital for "mild conditions", it added. (Photo by LLUIS GENE / AFP)

These latest operations came the day after at least two people drowned attempting the crossing when another vessel sank around 160 kilometres (100 miles) off the islands.

Spain’s coastguard saved 53 migrants “in good condition” near the island of Lanzarote and another 61, including a mother and baby, near the island of Gran Canaria, local emergency services said in a tweet.

The migrants found near Gran Canaria were all taken to hospital for “mild conditions”, it added.

Spain’s coastguard intercepted another boat early on Thursday with 54 migrants “in good condition” on board near Lanzarote, emergency services said.

People on board another two vessels were rescued Thursday afternoon.

The rescue operations came after a dinghy carrying migrants sank about 160 kilometres (100 miles) southeast of Gran Canaria.

The Spanish coastguard found the bodies of a minor and later a man in the area.

A Moroccan patrol boat rescued 24 people, according to Spain’s coast guard, which said it did not know how many people were missing.

But Spanish non-profit group Walking Borders — which monitors migrant boats to try to help them, and receives calls from people on the boats or their relatives — said 39 people had died, including four women and a baby.

The group’s founder, Helena Maleno, said the migrants had waited for more than 12 hours for assistance.

Spain is a major gateway for migrants seeking a better life in Europe and the number of boats heading for the Canaries from northwestern African has increased in recent days due to favourable weather conditions.

Over 1,500 migrants arrived in the Canaries during the first two weeks of June, according to interior ministry figures.

The migrant route from West Africa to the Canary Islands across the Atlantic has become more popular in recent years as authorities have cracked down on illegal migration in the Mediterranean Sea.

The Atlantic is notorious for strong currents that make such trips perilous.

Over 11,200 people have died or disappeared since 2018 while trying to reach Spain by sea, according to a report published by Walking Borders at the end of 2022.

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MIGRATION

Spain to debate blanket legalisation of its 500,000 undocumented migrants

Spain's parliament voted on Tuesday to debate an initiative which calls for the legalisation of all undocumented migrants living in the country.

Spain to debate blanket legalisation of its 500,000 undocumented migrants

The initiative, launched over three years ago by a group in defence of illegal migrants, was signed by more than 600,000 people and supported by some 900 associations.

It calls for the implementation of mechanisms that would allow undocumented migrants living in Spain to “leave a situation of invisibility and of ‘no rights'”.

“According to the most recent estimates, between 390,000 and 470,000 people are in an irregular situation in Spain, a third of whom are minors,” the text initiative said, although most media sourced put the figure at closer to 500,000.

Yet, “the criteria for obtaining a residence permit are very restrictive” and the procedure for obtaining a permit is “slow, bureaucratic”, the initiative added.

While the ruling Spanish Socialist Workers Party (PSOE) is in favour of parliament examining the proposed law, they remain cautious, saying European law does not allow for general legalisation of undocumented migrants.

But the backers of the initiative say that mass legalisation policies have been implemented several times over recent decades in the European Union, including in Spain.

PSOE politician Elisa Garrido said it was not difficult to “share… the laudable objective” of this initiative to “restore dignity and provide a regularised administrative situation to people who live in our country and have rights”.

The writers of the initiative say the current situation harms the “fundamental rights” of undocumented immigrants, who are not taxed, causing a “significant economic and fiscal loss” for Spain.

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