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Spain discovers Ivorian boy smuggled in suitcase

The silhouette of an Ivorian boy, shown by an X-ray scanner, being smuggled in a suitcase and discovered at Ceuta land border crossing office, May 8, 2015. (AFP photo)

An eight-year-old boy has been crammed into a suitcase and smuggled across the border from North Africa, Spanish police say.

The Ivory Coast boy named Abou was discovered on Thursday, when police at Ceuta, a Spanish enclave next to Morocco, put the roller luggage bag through an X-ray scanner and found the silhouette of a young boy curled up inside the suitcase.

“When they put the suitcase through the scanner, the operator noticed something strange, which seemed to be a person inside the case,” a Spanish Civil Guard police spokesperson told AFP. “When it was opened they found a minor, in a terrible state.”

A picture provided by the Spanish Civil Guard on May 8, 2015 shows an 8-year-old sub-Saharan boy hidden in a suitcase. (AFP photo)

 

The carrier of the suitcase, a 19-year old Moroccan woman, had aroused police suspicion at the land office of El Tarajal by her nervous state that prompted the security forces to scan her suitcase. She was arrested and a few hours later, the boy’s father, an Ivorian, was also busted at the same border crossing.

According to Spanish newspaper El Pais, the Moroccan courier woman was paid by the boy’s father to carry the suitcase.

“She seemed to hesitate, and it looked as though she didn't want to come through the border,” said a police spokesperson.

The boy’s father, also named Abou, reportedly lives in Canary Islands and had hoped his son would join him.

A picture provided by Spanish Guardia Civil on May 8, 2015 shows an 8-year-old sub-Saharan boy hidden in a suitcase. (AFP photo)

 

If the boy had not been spotted, “it could have led to a tragic end,” read a statement from the Civil Guard to EFE, a Spanish international news agency.

Each year, thousands of migrants and asylum seekers, who are escaping prosecution and war in their homelands, try to cross from the African country of Morocco into the Spanish territory illegally through the 15-kilometer Strait of Gibraltar.

The migrants embark on the perilous journey using makeshift boats and inflatable dinghies.

Every year, thousands of African people cross fences into Ceuta and Melilla near the Spanish border with Morocco. (AP photo)

 

Also, thousands of illegal migrants try to reach Spain through the cities of Ceuta and Melilla near the country’s border with Morocco. The Spanish government has installed a seven-meter-high triple-layer fence to prevent immigrants from crossing into Spanish territory.

Others smuggle themselves over the border hidden in vehicles and cargoes or try to swim or sail from shores on the Moroccan side and try to cross the Spanish border.

RS/AS/MHB


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