5 migrants die in mass attempt to enter Melilla, Spain, says Morocco
140 Moroccan security forces, 76 irregular migrants injured in attempts to surmount border fence
RABAT, Morocco
Five irregular migrants died on Friday in a mass attempt to storm the iron fence surrounding Melilla, a Spanish-administered city in North Africa, according to an official statement from Morocco.
The incident took place "as a result of a stampede of migrants and some of them fell from the top of the fence," Moroccan authorities of the country's northeastern Nador province, which borders Melilla, said in a statement.
Controlled by Spain, the cities of Melilla and Ceuta on the northern coast of Africa are the two most popular transit points for irregular African migrants headed for Europe.
The statement noted that 140 members of Moroccan forces trying to stop the migrants "sustained injuries of varying severity, including five seriously injured," while 76 of migrants were also wounded, including 13 severely.
A group of irregular migrants from sub-Saharan Africa on Friday morning tried to storm Melilla by climbing over the iron fence between it and the neighboring Moroccan city of Nador, according to the statement.
All the injured from both sides were transferred to Al-Hassani Hospital in Nador and the University Hospital Center in Oujda to receive treatment.
Earlier on Friday, the Spanish government said that more than 2,000 migrants had tried to force their way over border fence.
Local authorities in Melilla said at least 130 migrants had managed to get in.
The cities of Ceuta and Melilla, as well as the Aljaferia Islands and other rocky islets in the Mediterranean Sea, are under the administration of Madrid, while Rabat considers the islands and the two cities "occupied."
*Writing by Mahmoud Barakat
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