Search Site

TAQA Q1 net income $571m

Net income fell $2.58bn due to one-off items recognized in 2023.

QatarEnergy buys stake in Egypt blocks

It did not disclose the cost of the agreement.

TSMC’s April revenue up 60%

It capitalized on huge wave of demand for chips used in AI hardware.

Etihad reports record Q1 profit

Total revenue increased by $269 million in the same period.

Aramco Q1 profit down 14.5%

Despite lower profit, it will pay $31bn in dividends to Saudi government.

Protesters demand ‘justice’ on anniversary of Spain-Morocco border crush

Both Morocco and Spain have denied using excessive force, blaming the migrants for the violence.
  • The "marches for justice", organised by rights groups, denounced what they said was the authorities' refusal to investigate the causes of the incident
  • Amnesty international and other rights groups say at least 37 people were killed on 24 June, 2022, with another 76 migrants still missing

Melilla, Spain– Hundreds of protesters rallied Saturday near Spain’s North African enclave of Melilla, bordering Morocco, to mark a mass attempt by migrants to storm the territory, in which at least 23 people died.

The “marches for justice”, organized by several rights groups, denounced what they said was the authorities’ refusal to investigate the causes of the incident.

At least 200 people demonstrated near the fences guarding Melilla, according to AFP journalists at the scene.

Activist Quinndy Akeju said many families “had not yet identified or buried their dead” after some 2,000 migrants — many from conflict-torn Sudan — stormed the meters-high fence that seals off Melilla from Morocco on June 24, 2022.

She claimed there had been no “independent inquiry” into how Moroccan and Spanish police repelled them in one of the biggest attempted migrant crossings into the enclave in recent years.

Protests were also held in several cities in Spain, including Madrid and Barcelona.

The Moroccan government says some migrants died after falling from the fences, while others suffocated as people panicked and a stampede started.

But an Amnesty International report based on testimony from the scene said migrants were hit with tear gas, pelted with stones and beaten as well as kicked while on the ground.

Amnesty and other rights groups say at least 37 people were killed, with another 76 migrants still missing.

“To date, Morocco and Spain have failed to even release information to loved ones about the dead and missing or to acknowledge any wrongdoing,” said a statement from Amnesty.

Their failure to properly investigate the disaster amounted to a violation of international law and of human rights, the group added.

Both Morocco and Spain have denied using excessive force, blaming the migrants for the violence.