Emergency responders on Monday rescued 136 Europe-bound African migrants from a boat off the coast of the Canary island of El Hierro.
El Hierro is the second-smallest and farthest south and west of the Canary Islands, in the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Africa.
The migrants arrived at La Restinga port in Spain aboard a Spanish sea search and rescue agency’s vessel.
AFP reports that Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez heads on a three-day visit to West Africa on Tuesday, as his government grapples with a major upsurge in migrant arrivals.
Nearly every day, Spain’s coastguard rescues a boat carrying dozens of African migrants toward the Canary Islands off the northwest coast of Africa. The islands’ government has pleaded for more help.
Sanchez’s tour will take him to Mauritania, The Gambia and Senegal, three key countries in the migration crisis.
It was not known what incentives he could offer – notably to Mauritania, the main departure point, which he visited six months ago – to encourage authorities to step up efforts to prevent migrants from leaving.
Madrid estimates there are some 200,000 people in Mauritania waiting to go to the Canaries.
The regional leader of the islands, Fernando Clavijo, who met Sanchez on Friday, urged the European Union to do more “so that the Canary Islands do not have to shoulder all of Europe’s migratory pressure on its own”.
“In the end, it’s a pressure for Europe because they are arriving in Europe, in Spain, and not just on the Canary Islands”, he said.
The Canary Islands and Spain tend to be a stopping point for West African migrants who head for France and other European countries, AFP reported.
Between 1 January and 15 August this year, 22,304 migrants reached the Islands, compared with 9,864 in the same period in 2023 – an increase of 126 per cent, according to interior ministry figures.
Across all of Spain, there were 31,155 arrivals up to mid-August, a 66.2-per cent increase on the 18,745 a year earlier.
Numbers are expected to increase as autumn ushers in better weather conditions for navigating the Atlantic.
Last year saw a record 39,910 arrivals, but current levels suggest 2024 will set a new record, confirming the Atlantic route to the Canaries as the main conduit for migrants, despite its dangers.
The archipelago is “on the verge of collapse”, Clavijo said in an interview published Monday in El Mundo newspaper, predicting arrivals could reach 50,000 this year.
The Atlantic route is perilous due to the strong currents, with thousands of deaths and disappearances every year on overloaded, often unseaworthy boats.
This is not the only part of Spain to be affected by an upsurge in arrivals, with the tiny enclave of Ceuta also experiencing a sharp rise in newcomers in recent weeks.