I’d rather die than go back, Moroccan migrant boy tells Spanish soldier

Rachid Mohamed al Messaoui, a soldier of Spain's North African enclave of Ceuta, assists a Moroccan boy who used empty plastic bottles as a float to swim to Spanish-Moroccan border. (REUTERS)
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  • The boy floated in a dark T-shirt with bottles under his clothes and attached to his arms
  • Soldier Rachid Mohamed al Messaoui said the boy told him ‘he didn't care if he died from cold’

CEUTA: A Moroccan boy who used empty plastic bottles to swim to Spain’s North African enclave of Ceuta this week said he would rather die than go back to Morocco.
The boy told so to the Spanish soldier who translated for him before he was escorted away.
The boy attracted international media attention as he floated in a dark T-shirt with the bottles under his clothes and attached to his arms, crying as he reached the beach only to be led away by soldiers.
“He didn’t want to go back, he didn’t have any family in Morocco, he didn’t care if he died from cold; He preferred to die ... than go back to Morocco,” soldier Rachid Mohamed al Messaoui said.
“I never heard that from someone so young,” the 25-year-old told Reuters, speaking on the beach.
Soldiers accompanied the crying boy through the gate to the security zone between the two countries, along with other migrants. An army spokesman in Ceuta said he had no information on what happened to the boy.
Deporting minors is illegal in Spain and hundreds have been processed in a makeshift reception center in Ceuta.
The boy was one of some 8,000 migrants who swam or climbed over a border fence into the enclave this week after Rabat relaxed border controls. Spain has deployed troops to Ceuta to patrol the border with Morocco and called the situation a crisis for Europe.
On the northern tip of Morocco across from Gibraltar and with a population of 80,000, the enclave’s beaches are only a few hundred meters (yards) away.
Al Messaoui, who speaks Moroccan Arabic, or Darija, said he tried to put his feelings to one side to help calm those arriving on the beach, acting as a translator for his Spanish army colleagues.
“You feel frustrated, desperate that you can’t do more for that boy,” he said.
Asked what he would tell the parents of young Moroccans eager to cross over to Ceuta, he said: “Not to let them go, to be with them, and to be united as a family even if there are difficulties of life in their country... not to let them drift away alone, desperate, helpless.”