The National Police in Ceuta have identified 920 Moroccan minors who, after the massive entrance last week, are found in three accommodations in the autonomous city.
Those identified, 67 of them women, entered irregularly last week, when between 8,000 and 9,000 people entered from Morocco.
The autonomous city maintains 250 minors already identified in the covered pavilion of Santa Amelia, while another 240 minors are occupying the provisional shelter of Piniers, two places that were used during the pandemic and that have been reopened to attend this emergency care . The rest remain sheltered in the warehouses of the Tarajal industrial estate, very close to the border crossing. The Tarajal ship and the attention paid to it, as the Ceuta prosecutor verified when he visited the site, is not adequate, according to government sources.
More than 4,400 calls have received the telephone number authorized by the Ceuta Government for relatives who think their children are in Ceuta.
The identification is due to the "intense work" carried out by both police specialists and Social Affairs workers to have the data of these minors, according to sources from the Ceuta government.
The management of this border crisis left a trail of public complaints that point to rights violations that have been committed against minors.
Despite the fact that the Minister of the Interior, Fernando Grande-Marlaska, guaranteed that it would not be done, the minors were also returned hot to their country.
The Ceuta Prosecutor for Minors this week began an investigation into the hot returns of minors to Morocco that occurred by the Spanish authorities during the border crisis. As confirmed by the area prosecutor, José Luis Puerta, the procedure focuses, for the moment, on the case of Aschraf, whose story published by EL PAÍS reveals that the 16-year-old teenager was returned to Morocco on at least two occasions the last week, when between 8,000 and 9,000 people accessed the autonomous city.