The Civil Guard has released a video recorded before and after the tragedy of Ceuta where at least 14 people died last Thursday while trying to reach the Spanish coast swimming.The Civil Guard use this video as a response to criticism from the opposition groups and NGOs because of their actions during the attempt to jump the border fence by the migrants, but it really does not explain anything: images, recorded by security cameras, do not show neither the desperate attempt of Sub-Saharans to reach Spanish territory swimming nor the attitude of the agents, which do not appear in the video.It shows the arrival of hundreds of migrants to the border, and after a cut off, how some of them throwed stones, but this second part was allegedly recorded after their companions drown in beach of Tarajal after skirting the border jetty , not before.Thus, the video criminalize migrants, while not bring light on what happened in the water and, most importantly, how was the behaviour of the Spanish agents, who have been accused by some survivors of shooting rubber bullets to the migrants.From article:Spanish police continue to find bodies of African immigrants following Thursday's massive stampede of the Morocco-Spain border in which 250 people launched themselves at the barbed-wire fence on Tarajal beach, which is shared between two countries.So far, 15 sub-Saharan Africans have been found dead off the beach after having drowned during what has been described as an 'assault' on the fence on Thursday night at around 18.35hrs.Although it is far from a rare occurrence for would-be migrants to attempt to climb the fence into the Spanish-owned city-province of Ceuta – the nearest part of the African continental mainland to Spain – and its neighbouring Spanish enclave, Melilla, the latest tragedy is of a much greater magnitude with hundreds of people charging at the fence en masse leading to a number of deaths which are said to be rising as further victims are found.Most of the sub-Saharan Africans who had travelled by land to Ceuta's border fence on the Tarajal beach were stopped in their tracks by the Moroccan Gendarmerie, or caught on the other side by the Guardia Civil in Spanish territory, but a significant minority attempted to climb the fence where it juts out into the sea to make it more difficult for authorities to catch them.Nine of these were found drowned at the scene by the Moroccan authorities, and five sub-Saharan Africans were discovered on Friday.At least one of the dead is said to be female and none of them have passports, so border police are unable to tell what nationalities they all are.MP for Ceuta, Francisco Antonio González Pérez, described the 'extreme and hitherto unseen violence' employed by the would-be migrants as they attempted to enter Spanish territory which necessitated the use of riot equipment such as guns loaded with rubber pellets and tear-gas, although González Pérez says none of these were aimed at the people, 'only in the air as a scare tactic'.All the deceased are thought to be from Cameroon, the Ivory Coast and Guinea, although this cannot be proven as they did not have any identification documents with them.They have been taken to morgues in Tetuan, about 40 kilometres from Ceuta, and in the town known to those on the Spanish side as Castillejos and those on the Moroccan side as Fnideq.Border authorities have been considering lengthening the fence further into the water for some years now, since at low tide it is possible for border-crossers to wade around it and, if they get caught by sudden high tides in the process, can be washed out to sea.This is what has happened with the 15 migrants found so far, given that sudden high waves off the coast of Ceuta caught them unawares.Sources: