Sebta: a Spanish soldier, of Moroccan origin, shot dead

By Mohamed Deychillaoui on 10/11/2022 at 11:05 p.m.

Kiosk360. A young Spanish soldier of Moroccan origin was shot dead last Monday in the presidency of Sebta. The motive for this assassination, which took place in the so-called Moroccan district, has not yet been elucidated. This article is a press review of Al Ahdath Al Maghribiya.

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In its edition of Wednesday, October 12, the Arabic-language daily Al Ahdath Al Maghribiya reports that a staff sergeant of the Spanish regular army, of Moroccan origin, was shot several times in the early hours of the morning of last Monday in Sebta. Despite the rapid intervention of the emergency services, which transported him to the emergency resuscitation service of the Sebta university hospital, he might not be saved.

Al Ahdath explains that this crime took place in the neighborhood, known as “Principe Alfonso”, where the overwhelming majority of Moroccans in Sebta reside. Spanish police have so far arrested six people suspected of being involved in the shooting that targeted the 35-year-old Spanish-Moroccan Staff Sergeant. The shooter might well be among this group.

According to the daily’s local sources, the young soldier was killed when he was in the underground garage of the building where he lives, accompanied by some of his friends. The death of this Moroccan-Spanish raises many questions, because he is known for his good morals, while a whole gang came to the scene to riddle him with several bullets. The Spanish police immediately proceeded to a very strong mobilization of its men following this crime. She also cordoned off the entire neighborhood where all those who entered or left there were carefully checked.

Al Ahdath specifies that the “Principe Alfonso” district had hitherto been neglected by the security forces, which made it a favorite place for cartels who imposed their law there, sometimes in a very violent way, like the cities in the south of France. Americans. The most serious, fears the newspaper, is that these crimes often go beyond the borders of Sebta, because many members of local cartels flee to the nearest Moroccan areas to extract themselves from Spanish justice. This constitutes a great danger for the northern regions of the Kingdom, where these dangerous fugitives land, often heavily armed.

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