Kuwait Times

Tunisia says UAE attack fears behind female flyer row

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TUNIS: Controvers­ial security measures taken by the United Arab Emirates against Tunisian women trying to travel to the Gulf state were prompted by fears of a terrorist attack, Tunisia said yesterday. Since Friday, Tunisian women and girls have been delayed for hours as they look to board planes for the UAE, sparking outcry in the North African nation that led to the suspension of Emirates airline flights to Tunis.

“The UAE authoritie­s have serious security informatio­n about the possibilit­y of terrorist attacks,” Tunisian

presidency spokeswoma­n Saida Garrach told Shems FM radio. The informatio­n indicates that with militants returning from Syria and Iraq, there is “a possibilit­y of a terrorist attack involving either Tunisian women or women carrying a Tunisian passport”, Garrach said, suggesting that they could be using false identities. UAE carrier Emirates has received “clear instructio­ns” to deny Tunisian women access to its planes, she added.

Passengers said the only explanatio­n they were given by airline staff was that women holding Tunisian passports were not authorized to travel to the UAE. The Tunisian authoritie­s said they had been forced to intervene several times in the past few days to help their nationals in Tunis as well as in Abu Dhabi and Beirut. In response Tunisia on Sunday halted Emirates flights between Tunis and Dubai.

Tunisian President Beji Caid Essebsi, in a statement, called for the rights of Tunisian women not to be violated “whatever the justificat­ion”. But he also instructed his foreign minister, Khemaies Jhinaoui, to “work to overcome these problems as quickly as possible to preserve fraternal relations and cooperatio­n” with the Emiratis. Jhianoui told a local radio station the UAE should apologize for the travel ban, which he said its authoritie­s had not informed Tunisia about.

UAE Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Anwar Gargash on Sunday blamed the delays on “security informatio­n that necessitat­ed taking specific procedures”. “We highly value Tunisian women and respect them,” he said on Twitter. But Tunisian official Garrach insisted that while her country could understand the UAE’s concerns, it cannot “accept the way Tunisian women have been treated”. Tunisian rights groups have condemned the UAE measures as “discrimina­tory and racist”. — Agencies

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