Social A record number of migrants have arrived in Spain’s Canary Islands this year. Most are from Senegal

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BY RENATA BRITO
Updated 12:21 PM BRT, November 6, 2023

BARCELONA, Spain (AP) — A record number of migrants have made the treacherous boat journey on the Atlantic Ocean to Spain’s Canary Islands this year, and most of the 32,000 people are coming from Senegal.

The islands, located off West Africa, have been used for decades as a stepping stone to Europe. Boats also depart from Gambia, Mauritania, Morocco and Western Sahara.

According to an Associated Press tally of figures released by Spain’s Interior Ministry and local emergency services, at least 32,029 people landed on the Canary Islands from Jan. 1 to Nov. 5. That exceeds the migration crisis of 2006, when 31,678 migrants disembarked.
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Smugglers in Senegal pack young people looking for better opportunities in Europe into old artisanal fishing boats, charging them around 300,000 CFA francs ($490). The journey from Senegal to the Canaries usually takes a week of difficult upwind sailing for around 1,600 km (1,000 miles).

Migrant boats frequently shipwreck or disappear in the Atlantic.

To avoid border controls, smugglers take longer journeys, navigating west into the open Atlantic before continuing north to the Canaries — a detour that brings many to the tiny westernmost El Hierro island, at times overwhelming local authorities and emergency services.
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Once a beacon of democratic stability in West Africa, Senegal has seen socio-political unrest with violent clashes earlier this year. President Macky Sall’s embattled government has dissolved Ousmane Sonko’s opposition party, popular among young voters.

A lack of jobs, the rising cost of living, depleting fishing stocks and poor health care are some of the reasons pushing thousands to leave Senegal for Spain, said Saliou Diouf, a Senegalese migrants’ rights activist and founder of the association Boza Fii.

The political crisis and crackdown on the opposition have extinguished any remaining hope young people had of a better future at home, Diouf added.

“They are looking for a way out,” he said. “They no longer trust the system.”

Their journey is one of the longest and most dangerous to Europe. At least 512 people have died so far this year according to the International Organization for Migration, though the figure is believed to be a vast undercount.

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Diouf, who documents cases of missing migrants, says it’s impossible to know how many people have died because of the lack of information and transparency. Many migrants are not deterred by reports of shipwrecks, he said. They see those who make it and want to try their luck too.

While Senegalese migrants often struggle to obtain the necessary work and residency permits to stay in Spain, many eventually find ways to make a living in European cities or rural farmlands. When they do, the remittances they send home make a huge difference in their families’ lives.

Faced with the record number of arrivals this year, Spain’s Interior Minister Fernando Grande-Marlaska flew to the Senegalese capital of Dakar last week to press the government to do more to stop boats from leaving.
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Grande-Marlaska urged his Senegalese counterpart, Sidiki Kaba, to “act more quickly” and avoid more deaths.

“We agreed that we must combat irregular immigration with force,” Kaba said, acknowledging irregular migration as a “huge challenge” for Spain, Senegal and the European Union.

Spain has nearly 40 police and civil guard officers, four boats, a helicopter and an aircraft deployed in Senegal to monitor the country’s more than 500-kilometer (310-mile) coast and crack down on smuggling networks in collaboration with local authorities.

Madrid says the joint effort has successfully stopped 7,132 people from leaving Senegal this year.

During the 2006 “cayucos crisis” — named after the large canoe-shaped boats from Mauritania and Senegal often used by smugglers — Spain signed agreements with 10 African countries for them to accept returned migrants and stop new boats from leaving.

In the following years, arrivals to the Canary Islands declined and had been largely manageable until they spiked again in 2020 as a result of increased surveillance along the favored Mediterranean Sea route, among other factors.

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https://apnews.com/article/migration-senegal-canary-islands-spain-1cd7bb79372214ff86838a8895a92338
 
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There were shitloads of Senegalese in Morocco when I was there earlier this year, like fucking loads.
 
If you're unfortunate to be born in Senegal and have no opportunities for you and your family, I don't blame them for making that trek/gamble
Nah I think folks should fix their own countries instead of bailing to nicer countries and ruining it for the folks that made those countries great I even believe this for my own mexican folks mexico would be a better country if folks tried to fix its problems instead of bailing to the u.s. its like trashing a party house then moving the party to a nicer house then trashing that instead of maintaining and improving the original house they were at.
 
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Nah I think folks should fix their own countries instead of bailing to nicer countries and ruining it for the folks that made those countries great I even believe this for my own mexican folks mexico would be a better country if folks tried to fix its problems instead of bailing to the u.s. its like trashing a party house they moving the party to a nicer house then trashing that instead of maintaining and improving the original house they were at.

I understand the sentiment and I don't know the solution, but one thing that makes it a little more complicated is Europe thoroughly trashed Africa first. It will take many generations to make Africa stable.
 
Nah I think folks should fix their own countries instead of bailing to nicer countries and ruining it for the folks that made those countries great I even believe this for my own mexican folks mexico would be a better country if folks tried to fix its problems instead of bailing to the u.s. its like trashing a party house they moving the party to a nicer house then trashing that instead of maintaining and improving the original house they were at.
If you're a poor person in these countries, you have even less opportunities to fix anything

How can you fix your country when you have no food, no education, no resources?
 
If you're a poor person in these countries, you have even less opportunities to fix anything

How can you fix your country when you have no food, no education, no resources?
It isn't going to help to run away from your problems for generations instead of addressing them if Mexicans had tried to fix their problems in the 70s mexico would be a far better country in 2023 instead folks abandoned the mexican towns and cities for the u.s. it would like if americans mass imigranted to europe instead of fixing our problems.
 
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It isn't going to help to run away from your problems for generations instead of addressing them if Mexicans had tried to fix there problems in the 70s mexico would be a far better country in 2023 instead folks abandoned the mexican towns and cities for the u.s. it would like if americans mass imigranted to europe instead of fixing our problems.
You're talking as if one collective rather than individuals trying to do what's basic primal for them....to survive
 
I understand the sentiment and I don't know the solution, but one thing that makes it a little more complicated is Europe thoroughly trashed Africa first. It will take many generations to make Africa stable.

The best/brightest will mostly take the opportunity to go study/work in a western country. They will continue to suffer a massive “brain drain” as doctors, engineers, computer programmers, IT specialists, entrepreneurs, and even hardworking laborers leave for greener pastures. There has to be a reason for these people to stay in a country like Senegal, and there isn’t.

The head of IT where I work is from Ghana. No way he has any regrets.
But unfortunately, him and hundreds like him, would have brought about innovation in Ghana, if they stayed there.
 
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If spaniards don't like it they can ever join us at try to change EU's direction, but usually is'nt their stance
 
Canary Islands have an interesting history. It was originally home to a people called Guanches. The Spanish wiped them out. It served as a model for what Spain would go on to do in the Americas.
 
Canary Islands have an interesting history. It was originally home to a people called Guanches. The Spanish wiped them out. It served as a model for what Spain would go on to do in the Americas.
They had sex with them and converted them into their religion and culture
 
Canary Islands have an interesting history. It was originally home to a people called Guanches. The Spanish wiped them out. It served as a model for what Spain would go on to do in the Americas.


It's an interesting place as it's essentially Africa and quite volcanic, but the problem is it lacks any touristic appeal to me because for a long time it's just been a package holiday resort for families. Tacky looking. Could've been a real draw if it wasn't so built up.
 

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