Moment thousands of migrants storm Spanish enclave of Ceuta after 5,000 SWIM round border fence leaving one dead

 THIS is the moment that thousands of migrants stormed the Spanish enclave of Ceuta after 5,000 SWAM round a border fence, leaving one dead.

Thousands of Moroccans took advantage of relaxed border controls in their nation to swim or paddle in inflatable boats onto European soil.

Thousands of migrants arrive at the Spanish enclave of Ceuta
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Thousands of migrants arrive at the Spanish enclave of CeutaCredit: disclose.tv
Many African migrants regard Ceuta as a gateway into Europe
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Many African migrants regard Ceuta as a gateway into EuropeCredit: disclose.tv
Migrants swimming to the Spanish enclave of Ceuta on Monday
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Migrants swimming to the Spanish enclave of Ceuta on MondayCredit: BackGrid
The migrants made their way along the beach once ashore in EU territory
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The migrants made their way along the beach once ashore in EU territoryCredit: BackGrid
Hundreds waiting their turn to cross into Spain from the town of Fnideq, Morocco, last night
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Hundreds waiting their turn to cross into Spain from the town of Fnideq, Morocco, last nightCredit: EPA
Migrants swimming towards the border fence between Morocco and Ceuta
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Migrants swimming towards the border fence between Morocco and CeutaCredit: BackGrid
They then clambered ashore into the enclave, which is part of Spain
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They then clambered ashore into the enclave, which is part of SpainCredit: AP
Moroccan migrants continued to swim past the border last night
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Moroccan migrants continued to swim past the border last nightCredit: EPA
Spain has sent 200 extra police and soldiers to the area
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Spain has sent 200 extra police and soldiers to the areaCredit: EPA

Many had used inflatable rings and rubber dinghies, authorities said.

The arrival of the largest ever number of migrants in a single day came after Morocco opened border in the wake of a diplomatic row.

By Tuesday morning, around 6,000 people had crossed the border into the Spanish city of Ceuta since the first arrivals began early Monday, the Spanish government said, including 1,500 thought to be teenagers.

The city of 85,000 people lies in North Africa on the Mediterranean Sea, separated from Morocco by a double-wide, 10-metre (32ft) fence.

Video showed people climbing the rocky wall of the breakwaters and running across the Tarajal beach, in the south-eastern end of the city.

A young man drowned attempting the crossing and several others, including toddlers, were rescued suffering from hypothermia.

“They arrived in Ceuta swimming and included around 1,000 minors,” a spokesman for the local government said.

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Spanish Army and Guardia Civil officers next to the border of Morocco and Spain
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Spanish Army and Guardia Civil officers next to the border of Morocco and SpainCredit: AP
Moroccan migrants walk into shallow waters on the shore of the northern town of Fnideq
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Moroccan migrants walk into shallow waters on the shore of the northern town of FnideqCredit: AFP
Moroccan migrants walk along the shore towards the northern town of Fnideq as they attempt to cross the border from Morocco to Spain's North African enclave of Ceuta
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Moroccan migrants walk along the shore towards the northern town of Fnideq as they attempt to cross the border from Morocco to Spain's North African enclave of CeutaCredit: AFP

Around 200 extra police and soldiers were being deployed as migrants continued to stream into the North African enclave, which is part of Spain.

"The army has gathered at the border in a deterrent role, but there are great quantities of people on the Moroccan side waiting to enter," Juan Jesus Vivas told Cadena SER radio.

Vivas, a conservative, said the residents of Ceuta were in a state of "anguish, concern and fear".

Some 2,000 people were being held in a warehouse designed only a tenth that number, while others disappeared into the city, El Pais reports.

“We are overwhelmed," source in city told the paper.

A spokesman for the Spanish government in Ceuta said the scale of the influx was unprecedented and could yet rise.

The migrants had got there by swimming or walking at low tide from beaches, including Fnideq, in neighbouring Morocco, a few kilometres to the south, he said.

One man celebrates after making it into Ceuta, an EU enclave in north Africa
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One man celebrates after making it into Ceuta, an EU enclave in north AfricaCredit: AP
Two of the migrants in the sea swimming past the border fence
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Two of the migrants in the sea swimming past the border fenceCredit: AFP
One exhausted man on the beach
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One exhausted man on the beachCredit: AFP
Around a third of those who crossed into Ceuta were children
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Around a third of those who crossed into Ceuta were childrenCredit: BackGrid
Some of the migrants were held in a warehouse
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Some of the migrants were held in a warehouseCredit: BackGrid

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez has called off a trip to Paris planned for later on Tuesday due to the surge in migrant arrivals in Ceuta, the government said.

Spain’s Interior Ministry said it would increase the security presence in the area and said both countries had recently agreed anyone illegally entering Ceuta would be returned.

The influx followed the souring of Spain's relations with Morocco over Madrid's decision to allow the leader of a militant group to receive medical treatment.

It emerged that Polisario Front leader Brahim Ghali arrived in northern Spain in mid-April and is being treated in hospital for Covid-19.

The Polisario Front has long fought for the independence of Western Sahara, which Morocco has ruled since 1975.

Ceuta and nearby Melilla have the EU's only land borders with Africa, making them popular entry points for migrants seeking a better life in Europe.

Police helping one of the migrants out the water
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Police helping one of the migrants out the waterCredit: AFP
A woman arriving ashore in the enclave
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A woman arriving ashore in the enclaveCredit: EPA

Hundreds of them risk injuries or death every year while trying to jump over fences, hide inside vehicles or by swimming around breakwaters that extend into the Mediterranean Sea.

The sheer number people making the crossing in just one day strained police and emergency workers in Ceuta, a city of only 84,000 people.

The figure is nearly three times the total arrivals so far this year in the two Spanish territories and more than in 2020, when 2,228 people arrived by both land and sea.Last year a 17-year-old girl was found curled up in the foetal position behind a car's glove compartment as she tried to smuggle herself into Spain.

She was attempting to cross into Melilla, another Spanish enclave on the north coast of Morocco.

Border cops searched further with special machines and detected a heartbeat coming from behind the dashboard.

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