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Sunday, December 15, 2024
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Sanchez starts West Africa tour with agreements to combat people smuggling

publish time

28/08/2024

publish time

28/08/2024

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Migrants disembark at the port of 'La Estaca' in Valverde at the Canary island of El Hierro, Spain on Aug 26, after a thirteen-day voyage by boat from the coast of Senegal. (AP)

BARCELONA, Spain, Aug 28, (AP): Spain's prime minister announced a series of agreements with the West African nation of Mauritania on Tuesday to stem a surge in migrants making the dangerous Atlantic journey to the Canary Islands. Speaking alongside Mauritanian President Mohamed Ould Ghazouani in Nouakchott, Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez said Spain will expand its circular migration program to Mauritanians and renew cooperation between the two nations' security forces to combat people smuggling and trafficking networks.

"Despite the rhetoric that is growing in Europe, migration is not a problem,” Sánchez said, openly recognizing the need for migrant workers in Spain's aging society. "It is a need that involves certain problems, and for this we must push formulas that allow us to manage the phenomenon of migration in a humane, safe and orderly way, to benefit our respective societies.” Sánchez is on a three-day tour of West Africa to reinforce bilateral relations with Mauritania, Gambia and Senegal, where the majority of migrant boats reaching the Canary Islands are being launched from.

The Spanish archipelago - located close to the African coast and used as a stepping stone for migrants and refugees trying to reach continental Europe - has seen more than 22,000 people land on its shores since January, more than double the number of irregular arrivals for the same period last year, according to Spain’s Interior Ministry. "Until not long ago Spain was also a country of migrants ... they aspired to better lives, much like those who take great risks and take on this dangerous adventure,” Sánchez said. Among those making it to the Canaries are thousands of Malian refugees fleeing violence and instability in the Sahelian nation as well as youth from Senegal, Mauritania and other West African countries who are seeking better job opportunities abroad.