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Threats and opportunities for migrants on Spain’s southern border

While new legislation simplifies the issuing of residence permits for those embarking in formation for work, an enormous Detention Center for undocumented foreigners is under construction in Algeciras. Civil and Church organizations warn that this infrastructure could become a prison for individuals who have committed no crime.

By Felipe Herrera-Espaliat, special envoy to Algeciras, Spain

Abdelaziz Zeriouh's good performance during his internship as a waiter allowed him to secure a job contract. With stable employment and valid residence documents, he can now live without problems and contribute to Spanish society. (Giovanni Culmone/Global Solidarity Fund)
Abdelaziz Zeriouh's good performance during his internship as a waiter allowed him to secure a job contract. With stable employment and valid residence documents, he can now live without problems and contribute to Spanish society. (Giovanni Culmone/Global Solidarity Fund)

Abdelaziz Zeriouh was 17 years old when he illegally crossed the border between Nador, Morocco, and the Spanish city of Melilla. He was in search of a better future but was soon apprehended and, being an unaccompanied minor, he was placed under state guardianship. Upon turning 18, he was granted a residence permit in Spain, but it did not allow him to work. Without the means to support himself or to study, he started to travel between various cities on the peninsula where he found work in the so-called black market. Without documents, he found himself exposed to exploitation and precarious working conditions. 

His situation is not unique, as, from the moment a person enters Spanish territory without prior permission or by crossing the border without going through a checkpoint, they are considered an irregular immigrant. As such, the law foresees their expulsion from the country unless they regularize their situation, a procedure that, in the best of cases, can take between two and three years.

During this period, migrants are denied social rights, and the vast majority work illegally. Additionally, a high percentage of men and women end up in the hands of human trafficking mafias, forcing them into domestic work, begging on the streets, or entering into prostitution. Abdelaziz experienced this while working hard as a fruit picker in the fields during harvest seasons.

Social worker Araceli Navarro utilizes the legal mechanism of "Establishment through Training" to assist migrants arriving at the “ProLibertas Foundation.” There, they receive vocational training that enables them to obtain a residence permit and, subsequently, a job contract in Spain. (Giovanni Culmone/Global Solidarity Fund)
Social worker Araceli Navarro utilizes the legal mechanism of "Establishment through Training" to assist migrants arriving at the “ProLibertas Foundation.” There, they receive vocational training that enables them to obtain a residence permit and, subsequently, a job contract in Spain. (Giovanni Culmone/Global Solidarity Fund)

Stability through formation

A change in the law is now facilitating migrants who have been in Spain for more than two years and want to learn a trade that will enable them to obtain a work contract later on. This new process is called "Arraigo por formación," or establishment through training, and, according to data from the Permanent Observatory of Immigration in Spain, it has granted over 15,000 residence permits in the last year.

"If a person commits to training in a specific field, this allows them to receive, initially, a residence permit. Later, if they complete their studies and obtain a diploma, they can benefit not only from a residence permit but also a work permit, enabling them to find employment in the specialized sector," explains Araceli Navarro, a social worker from the .

The courses at the “ProLibertas Foundation”'s School of Training and Hotel Entrepreneurship provide individuals with skills not only for the workplace but also on a personal, emotional, and social level. (Giovanni Culmone/Global Solidarity Fund)
The courses at the “ProLibertas Foundation”'s School of Training and Hotel Entrepreneurship provide individuals with skills not only for the workplace but also on a personal, emotional, and social level. (Giovanni Culmone/Global Solidarity Fund)

This organization is affiliated with the Trinitarian Order and has a School of Training and Hotel Entrepreneurship in Algeciras. Abdelaziz received comprehensive training there and, aged 22, he now works regularly as a waiter at "," a well-known seafood restaurant in the city.

"I managed to do my internship here, and it went very well, with the best boss I've ever had, with the best colleagues, in the best company I've ever worked for in my life," comments Abdelaziz, who is not the only migrant on the staff. Everyone has a contract and proper documentation. "The important thing is that they come to work. I try to help everyone, and already eight or nine [migrants] have passed through here, but they need to commit to the work. I ask only for that," says Juan Moreno, the restaurant owner.

Trinitarian priest Francisco Ferrer, Coordinator of the Delegation of the “ProLibertas Foundation” in Algeciras, engages in dialogue with Abdelaziz Zeriouh, a former student of the School of Training and Hotel Entrepreneurship. (Giovanni Culmone/Global Solidarity Fund)
Trinitarian priest Francisco Ferrer, Coordinator of the Delegation of the “ProLibertas Foundation” in Algeciras, engages in dialogue with Abdelaziz Zeriouh, a former student of the School of Training and Hotel Entrepreneurship. (Giovanni Culmone/Global Solidarity Fund)

Migrant Center or Prison?

But it’s not only good news for those assisting migrants. The inauguration, in January, of a new Immigration Detention Center (IDC) in Algeciras is planned. It’s an enormous facility where migrants from the region with ongoing expulsion proceedings will be detained.

There are seven such centres in Spain where individuals who have committed not a crime, but the administrative offence of not having proper documents, or have entered entering the country through an unauthorized passage are deprived of their liberty. Several NGOs and Church associations oppose these facilities, which operate under a prison regime run by the police, and where migrants can stay for a maximum of 60 days, after which they usually either return to their home country or end up on the streets because not all expulsions are executed.

A few meters from the Botafuegos prison in Algeciras, the construction of the controversial new Immigration Detention Center is nearing completion. It can accommodate up to 500 people awaiting expulsion from Spain. (Giovanni Culmone/Global Solidarity Fund)
A few meters from the Botafuegos prison in Algeciras, the construction of the controversial new Immigration Detention Center is nearing completion. It can accommodate up to 500 people awaiting expulsion from Spain. (Giovanni Culmone/Global Solidarity Fund)

The new IDC in Algeciras is being built with funds from the European Union, which, according to official information, would exceed 26 million euros. It has been presented as a model detention centre for migrants because it would have recreational areas, as well as permanent health and social assistance. However, according to the lawyer Jesús Mancilla, a volunteer for the none of these facilities or services are sufficient to render a space he considers inadequate and entirely unnecessary, humane. 

 

"In practice, IDCs are run like a prison where people have set times for being in their cell, a time for being in the courtyard, a time for meals, and a time to return to their cell. While, by definition, IDCs must not have the features of a prison, people need to know that IDCs are prisons for immigrants!" argues Mancilla. Therefore, his association, along with others, is calling for the structure not to be authorized. Amongst other things, he notes, it has been built just a few meters from the Botafuegos prison.

"The imprint and symbolism given to this building, located next to a prison, make it a real prison. So, for public opinion, it is difficult not to associate the CIE with a prison for people who have done something wrong when, in reality, it is people simply migrating in search of a better life," observes the lawyer.

Jesús Mancilla, a lawyer and volunteer for the "Algeciras Acoge" foundation, asserts that Immigration Detention Centers should not have a prison-like regime but, in reality they function as actual prisons for migrants seeking a better life. (Giovanni Culmone/Global Solidarity Fund)
Jesús Mancilla, a lawyer and volunteer for the "Algeciras Acoge" foundation, asserts that Immigration Detention Centers should not have a prison-like regime but, in reality they function as actual prisons for migrants seeking a better life. (Giovanni Culmone/Global Solidarity Fund)

Threat of xenophobia

Currently, another CIE in Algeciras is located in the old La Piñera prison, a prison that was closed due to the precarious conditions of its facilities. Although this detention centre has space for 60 people, Mancilla claims that it has never accommodated more than 30 migrants at a time. Therefore, there is great concern about the opening of a new centre capable of accommodating 500 people, as Mancilla believes authorities would be forced to fill the CIE to justify the million-dollar investment, potentially unleashing a wave of xenophobic persecution.

The chaplain of the CIE in Algeciras, Father Livio Pegoraro, coordinator of Pastoral Care of Migrants in the Campo de Gibraltar and Ceuta region, is also concerned. The Scalabrinian priest meets with detainees every week in the courtyard of the dilapidated former prison to speak with anyone who wishes to do so, regardless of their religious belief, as the majority are Muslim.

Father Livio Pegoraro, a Scalabrinian priest and chaplain of the Immigration Detention Center, questions the sense of sending people who have lived in Spain for 30 years back to their countries of origin. (Giovanni Culmone/Global Solidarity Fund)
Father Livio Pegoraro, a Scalabrinian priest and chaplain of the Immigration Detention Center, questions the sense of sending people who have lived in Spain for 30 years back to their countries of origin. (Giovanni Culmone/Global Solidarity Fund)

"These people often suffer trauma because they find themselves in a kind of prison, separated from their families, work, and life projects, and are administratively sent back to their country. Among them, I have met people who have been in Spain for 30 years. So, what does it mean for them to return to their country of origin?" Pegoraro wonders.

Therefore, the chaplain notes that using CIEs as a means to regulate the migration flow is wrong because it "criminalizes migrants simply for being migrants, while the Universal Declaration of Human Rights states that a person has the right to move freely," he recalls. But the chaplain reiterates his optimism and says he has not lost hope for a better scenario as he takes stock of the great moral, spiritual, and human energy demonstrated by migrants that give them strength and perseverance. "Decrees, debates, and prejudices will not end this situation. Life is stronger than anything else," declares Father Livio, who had just been served at table with great professionality by Abdelaziz Zeriouh, in a restaurant in Algeciras.

"The important thing is that they come to work. I try to help everyone, but they need to commit to the work," says Juan Moreno, owner of the restaurant "La Esquina". (Giovanni Culmone/Global Solidarity Fund)
"The important thing is that they come to work. I try to help everyone, but they need to commit to the work," says Juan Moreno, owner of the restaurant "La Esquina". (Giovanni Culmone/Global Solidarity Fund)
Although his current job is demanding, Abdelaziz has left behind the period when he was exploited as a fruit picker in the fields. Today, he has a contract that not only provides job security but also allows him to reside in Spain without problems. (Giovanni Culmone/Global Solidarity Fund)
Although his current job is demanding, Abdelaziz has left behind the period when he was exploited as a fruit picker in the fields. Today, he has a contract that not only provides job security but also allows him to reside in Spain without problems. (Giovanni Culmone/Global Solidarity Fund)
Training at the “ProLibertas Foundation” offers essential skills needed to work in the hotel and restaurant sector, such as food handling, cooking, and table service. A highly practical methodology is used, helping students secure internships. (Giovanni Culmone/Global Solidarity Fund)
Training at the “ProLibertas Foundation” offers essential skills needed to work in the hotel and restaurant sector, such as food handling, cooking, and table service. A highly practical methodology is used, helping students secure internships. (Giovanni Culmone/Global Solidarity Fund)

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13 December 2023, 15:00