POLICE have said for the first time they believe “at least” 50 migrants were tortured and thrown overboard on a boat heading to the Canary Islands.
The victims are feared to have been accused of witchcraft on the horror crossing from Africa.
AFPMigrant boats are common heading for the Canary Islands[/caption]
ReutersA rescue worker carries a migrant child while disembarking on Gran Canaria[/caption]
SolarpixPolice have detained a number of migrants over the suspected deaths[/caption]
SolarpixWitnesses described seeing the the horror scenes on the boat[/caption]
The first allegations of mass high seas executions on board the overcrowded vessel emerged at the start of the month.
It came as 248 survivors were rescued off the African coast and taken to Gran Canaria.
Detectives began investigating after witnesses brought ashore claimed to have seen fellow migrants beaten up and shot by people smugglers.
The gang accused them of being witches when they suffered engine problems and started running out of food.
Subsequent reports said 17 men – 16 Senegalese nationals and one Gambian – had been arrested and remanded in custody by a Spanish judge probing the allegations.
Today police said 19 suspects had been detained as they released the first images of the arrests and detailed for the first time in an official statement the results of their inquiries into the nightmare Atlantic crossing so far.
The migrants were brought ashore at Arguineguin on Gran Canaria’s southern coast on August 25.
It was a day after the overcrowded vessel – known as a cayuco – was rescued off the African city of Dakhla 265 miles from the Canaries by Spanish coastguards after Moroccan officials said they were unable to help.
A spokesman for Spain’s National Police in Gran Canaria said today, as the force released footage of the suspects being hauled handcuffed onto a bus from refugee reception centres.
He said: “National Police officers have arrested 19 people on suspicion of murders and torture on board a cayuco rescued on August 24.
The vessel was adrift in waters off Gran Canaria and 248 migrants were in it, although one subsequently died in hospital.
“Several migrants who were travelling in it spoke of murders, wounding and torture committed during the crossing.
“The disappearance of at least 50 people thrown into the sea by the alleged people smugglers is also being investigated.
“All of those held, who were travelling in the same boat, have been remanded in custody after appearing in court.”
The police force added: “The investigation points to the vessel having left Senegal initially with around 300 people on board, with the estimated disappearance of at least 50 migrants during the 11 days the journey apparently lasted.
“The boat, made of wood and around 65ft long, was located adrift by Spanish Coastguard vessel Guardamar Urania, which took the 248 occupants to Argenenguin.
“According to statements taken from witnesses, several of the migrants arrested not only piloted the cayuco, but also assaulted dozens of people, hitting them and mistreating them in several ways.
“In some cases they threw migrants while they were still alive overboard into the ocean as well as refusing to help those who accidentally fell into the water.
“The witnesses point to the disappearance of around 30 people thrown overboard, although investigators calculate more than 50 people died or disappeared on the basis that the cayuco left Senegal with around 300 people on board.
“The causes of these deaths, according to the witness testimony gathered, is that they are allegedly related to superstitions that identified as ‘witches’ certain people on the boat when incidents occurred during the crossing, such as engine failures, lack of food or bad weather.
“Likewise homicides have been documented for the simple reason that some people protested or showed their inconformity with the travel conditions.
EPAImmigrants arrive at La Restinga harbor on El Hierro island, Canary Islands, Spain[/caption]
EPAMigrants disembark from the vessel ‘La Salvamar Al Nair’ at Arrecife port in Lanzarote[/caption]
EPAImmigrants are assisted upon arrival at La Restinga harbor on El Hierro island, Canary Islands, Spain[/caption]
“The 19 suspects identified are being investigated on suspicion of people trafficking, homicide, wounding and torture.”
The jail remand decision was taken by a duty judge at a court in San Bartolome de Tirajana in Gran Canaria who questioned the suspects as well as the four survivors described locally as ‘protected witnesses’.
It is not known if the men held answered questions or retained their right to silence.
In June Spanish police confirmed they had launched an investigation after the bodies of five migrants were found in the sea off the Balearic Islands with their hands and feet bound.
Initial speculation centred on the possibility they could have been murdered and thrown overboard.
The families of the men who died, all Somalians, later revealed they were shackled in a death ritual after they perished from starvation as they tried to reach Europe.
They had been on a boat that was rescued on May 8 by Spanish coastguards 62 miles from Alicante, with 16 male survivors suffering dehydration and other health problems and a dead man on board.
The vessel had left Algeria a fortnight earlier before it was left adrift following engine problems.
During their trip they ended up having to eat just one date a day and drink their own urine, with the men whose bodies were recovered from the Mediterranean said to have fatally opted to drink sea water to try to survive.
Red Cross chiefs said after their rescue: “One of the people rescued had eaten toothpaste because it was the only thing he had.
“He didn’t want to let go of the tube when he reached dry land.”
Canary Islands migrant ’emergency’
OFFICIALS on the Canary Islands are demanding a state of emergency be declared to combat the growing migrant crisis.
Around 47,000 people arrived on the Spainish islands on small boats last year with government officials saying the number of unaccompanied minors has reached almost three times the official capacity.
This year alone, from January 1, to May 15, 10,882 people have reached the Canaries via maritime routes.
Many of these include young children with the government now admitting they are struggling to keep them all safe due to the volume of those arriving.
The popular holiday islands have a recognised capacity to house 1,737 migrant children.
But the number coming over from parts of West Africa across the Atlantic Ocean have skyrocketed recently with 5,017 minors now on the archipelago.
Concerned officials on the Canary Islands formally asked the Spanish government to declare a migration emergency after the figures were revealed.
A decree was reportedly approved last week by Spain’s Council of Ministers.
The Ministry of Youth and Children are now set to officially declare the emergency which will allow for a reform of the Immigration Law to be activated.
This will see the unhoused minors be transferred from the Canary Islands across to mainland Spain.
It comes as the government admitted the massive surge of immigrants arriving to the Canary Islands poses a “security risk”.
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