Alhucemas Islands



The Alhucemas Islands (Islas Alhucemas, جزر الحسيمة) is a group of islands and one of the Spanish plazas de soberanía just off the Moroccan coast in the Alboran Sea.

Overview
Peñón de Alhucemas, together with the islets of Isla de Mar and Isla de Tierra slightly to the west, form the Alhucemas Islands. They are located 300 m off the Moroccan town of Al Hoceima, or Alhucemas (former Villa Sanjurjo), 146 km east of Ceuta and 84 km west of Melilla. The aggregate land area of the group of three islands is 4.6 ha or 0.046 km2.

Spanish rule dates back to 1559, when the Saadis ceded several territories to Spain in exchange for Spanish help against Ottoman armies. In 1673, Spain sent a garrison to the island of Peñón de Alhucemas, and has permanently occupied it since then. The islands are also located near the landing place the Spanish and French expeditionary forces used in 1925 during the Rif War. Morocco has contested Spanish sovereignty over the islets since Morocco received its independence in 1956.
 * Peñón de Alhucemas (, "Lavender Rock", 35.2135°N, -3.8895°W) is a tiny rock island, measuring 220 m east-west and up to 84 m north-south, with an area 1.5 ha or 0.015 km2, and a height of 27 m. The rock is entirely occupied by a fort, several houses, and a church. It is one of several peñones, or rock-fortresses, off the coast of Northern Africa.
 * Isla de Tierra (35.2152°N, -3.9026°W) is a steep, 11 m high rocky platform, 114 m north of the Moroccan beach, 192 m long northeast–southwest, and up to 87 m wide, yielding an area of 1.7 ha or 0.017 km2.
 * Isla de Mar (35.2176°N, -3.9008°W) is a flat, 4 m high islet, with its western end 93 m north of Isla de Tierra, 245 m long east–west, up to 70 m wide, yielding an area of 1.4 ha or 0.014 km2.

In 2012 the Spanish military garrison in the fort on Peñón de Alhucemas comprised an infantry section of 25–30 men from the 32nd Mixed Artillery Regiment, plus personnel from the marine services with an inflatable boat for reaching supply vessels.

On 29 August 2012, 19 sub-Saharan immigrants traversed the short expanse of water between Morocco and the Isla de Tierra. These individuals camped on the island, hoping to somehow gain access into the Spanish mainland. They were shortly joined by an additional 68 immigrants on 2 September 2012. Refugees and illegal immigration from sub-Saharan nations has been a problem that Spain, and the European Union as a whole, has been trying to solve. Since the islets had an "undefined internal status", the immigrants did not benefit from the Spanish immigration laws and, under a joint operation, Spanish troops tended to the women, children, and medical needs of the immigrants, then turned them back over to Morocco. Moroccan forces promptly deported the individuals across the Algerian border. The Spanish Army has since stationed a small camp on the Isla de Tierra to discourage new attempts to illegally cross into Spanish territory. The handling and deportation of these individuals have been criticized by the Ombudsman of the Spanish Parliament, the Defensor del Pueblo, and by various NGOs and organizations.