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A total of 13 people were arrested, and additional police were located after an attack on a pensioner who caused anti -dense riots in a small city of Southern Spain.
Last Wednesday, three people of North African origin were detained on suspicion of attacking a 68-year-old man in Torre Pachek.
Praise began after the distribution of videos in social media, igniting the city out of 40,000 people in which the large population of immigrants live.
Later, the pensioner and the police said the video was not related to the incident, but social media urge to find and attack the criminals who quickly multiplied.
By Friday, the group armed with batons could see that Torre Pachek wandered through the streets of Torre.
One of the extreme right -wing groups called “Deport them now” called for attacks on people of North African descent. This week for three days for three days for three days for three days for three days for three days this week.
A leading member of the extremist group was detained in the northeastern city of Mataro on suspicion of spreading the language of hatred.
The 68-year-old victim of the attack last Wednesday, called Locally Doming Thomas Doming, told the Spanish media that he had been thrown to the ground and hit during a morning walk.
The photo that circulates on social media showed that his face has a wide bruise.
Police said the motive of the attack was unclear. Mr. Dominges said he was not asked to hand over money or his things and do not understand the language spoken by his attackers.
The presence of the police was erected, with more than 130 officers from the local police in the province of Murcia and the Gordani Civil.
Three people arrested on suspicion of an attack on the pensioner are Moroccan origin in the early 20th, and no one is the residents of Torre Pachek.
One of the suspects was arrested on Monday when he was preparing to take a train from the Basque region to cross the border to France.
The worst thing in the riots happened over the weekend when groups of young men – some of the hoods – attacked vehicles and enterprises. The contractions between extreme groups and people of North African origin were also reported.
On Sunday night, journalists witnessed several dozen young men who threw glass bottles and other riot police.
In video surveillance, which is shared by several Spanish outlets, a group of men, some armed bats and sticks could be seen on the same night barbecue store.
Mayor Torre Pochek Pedro English Rock called for “migrants’ community not to leave their homes or resist the riots.”
Many of the residents of the migrant in the city work in the flowering agricultural sector of the district, and some complain that the city no longer feels safe. The mayor stated that they lived in Torre Pachaho for more than 20 years.
Extreme right -wing telegram has reportedly urged people to drain from other parts of Spain and participate in North African Hunting for three days this week. Their channel has been closed since then.
Interior Minister Fernando Grando-Malanda attributed violence against anti-migration rhetoric from the extreme right-wing groups and parties, such as the Vox-third of the Spanish political force.
Vox leader Santiago Abkal has denied responsibility for the riots and accused the “mass immigration” policy of allowing the allegedly guilty of an attack last week to enter the country.
Speaking of migration, Abkal said, “It stole our borders, it stole our world, and it stole our prosperity.”
Murcia Prosecutor’s Office opened an investigation into hatred of the Vox regional president, Jose Angel Antella, who said last week that the violence was “guilty” of two major parties of Spain – a popular party (PP) and the Socialist Party (PSOE).
Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said on X: “What we see in Tor-Pachek causes us all. We must speak, act firmly and defend the values that unite us. Spain is a country of rights, not hatred.”