Kuwait Times

Tunisia, Germany strike new immigratio­n deal

Both countries to tackle illegal migration

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TUNIS:

German Chancellor Angela Merkel announced a new agreement with Tunisia on tackling illegal migration during a visit yesterday, following tensions over the case of the Tunisian suspect in the Berlin market attack. Merkel, on a two-day trip to North Africa that also included a stop in Egypt, said Germany and Tunisia had agreed on faster repatriati­ons for rejected asylum seekers and job training for Tunisians. The German leader, who faces elections in September, is under pressure to reduce the number of asylum seekers coming to her country, which has taken in more than one million migrants since 2015.

Merkel, who was also due to address Tunisia’s parliament, has urged the North African states to step up border controls and speed up procedures to repatriate migrants whose asylum applicatio­ns are turned down. Germany has said that Tunisian bureaucrat­ic delays meant it could not expel Anis Amri, the suspect in the truck rampage at a Berlin Christmas market that killed 12 people, even though his asylum applicatio­n had been rejected six months earlier.

Merkel said that the two countries had agreed that questions from Germany on the identities of Tunisian asylum seekers will be answered within 30 days. “We will also help Tunisia to set up a registrati­on system. Replacemen­t passports are then meant to be issued within one week,” she said at a joint news conference with Tunisian President Beji Caid Essebsi. This agreement “will satisfy Tunisia and will satisfy Germany,” Essebsi said, adding that it concerned about 1,500 Tunisians whose residency requests have been refused by Germany.

“Measures will be taken in the Tunisian consulates in Germany to help in their identifica­tion,” Essebsi said. Her talks also covered ways to respond to years of instabilit­y exploited by people smugglers in neighborin­g Libya. “We know the political situation in Libya is difficult,” she said, welcoming Tunisia’s efforts to help resolve the turmoil. “No-one is more interested in political stability in Libya than its neighbors, but I’ll say, because of the migration issue, it’s also important for us Europeans.”

Aid money pledge

The migrant issue had already been contentiou­s in Germany where sexual assaults by large groups of mostly North African men on New Year’s Eve 2015-16 against women in Cologne provoked outrage. Merkel’s interior minister floated an idea for North African countries to build holding centers for returned migrants but it was rejected by Merkel’s centre-left coalition partners and rights groups.

The visit is also a chance for Merkel to pledge support for a country often hailed as a rare success story of the Arab Spring uprisings that shook the region and toppled autocrats including longtime Tunisian dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali. Since its 2011 revolution, Tunisia has passed a new constituti­on and held free parliament­ary and presidenti­al elections. But the nation faces high unemployme­nt, social tensions and the threat from jihadists who have killed dozens of soldiers and police as well as civilians including 59 foreign tourists.

Speaking in Tunis, Merkel announced 250 million euros ($264 million) in developmen­t aid. “The funds are for rural developmen­t, small and medium enterprise­s, but mainly for youths... who especially need job training and employment opportunit­ies,” she said. Her trip is part of a larger diplomatic push by the German leader, who last year visited Mali, Niger and Ethiopia. She had also planned a trip to Algeria last week, but it was called off after President Abdelaziz Bouteflika fell ill.

Germany, which this year holds the G20 presidency, has also announced investment partnershi­ps in Africa with the long-term goals of reducing poverty and deterring people from leaving. Merkel was joined on her trip by a business delegation that could bring much-needed investment­s.—AFP

 ??  ?? TUNIS: Tunisian President Beji Caid Essebsi, left, walks with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, while reviewing an honor guard during an official welcome ceremony at the presidenti­al palace in Carthage, near Tunis, Tunisia, yesterday. —AP
TUNIS: Tunisian President Beji Caid Essebsi, left, walks with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, while reviewing an honor guard during an official welcome ceremony at the presidenti­al palace in Carthage, near Tunis, Tunisia, yesterday. —AP

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