Las Vegas Review-Journal

Tunisia admits migrants on boat turned away elsewhere

- By Bouazza Ben Bouazza The Associated Press

TUNIS, Tunisia — Prime Minister Youssef Chahed said he is allowing 40 migrants who have been kept at sea for two weeks to enter Tunisia “for humanitari­an reasons.”

Chahed said late Saturday that he would authorize a Tunisian-flagged commercial boat that has been carrying the migrants since July 16 to dock at the southern port of Zarzis.

The migrants reportedly were stranded in the Mediterran­ean Sea for five days before a Maltese ship picked them up, then transferre­d them to the commercial boat.

Italy, Malta and France refused to let the vessel into their ports. The Maltese government refuted claims it violated internatio­nal maritime laws by directing the migrants to Tunisia, the nearest port.

Ali Hajji, the captain of the Sarost 5, said Sunday that “everyone, port authoritie­s and navy, is still waiting for the order to be given to them so that the boat can enter the port and disembark the migrants.”

The Tunisian Red Crescent said it has been providing the migrants with food and medical assistance after warning of the dire sanitary conditions of the boat and the poor psychologi­cal state of the passengers, who include two pregnant women.

The group’s president, Mongi Slim, says the Red Crescent will continue to assist the migrants once they reach land.

“We have already prepared a whole floor in the home for migrants that we manage in (the local town of ) Medenine,” Slim said.

The shelter currently houses more than 200 African migrants and some 46 Syrian refugees, he added.

Humanitari­an groups have said the boat’s passengers include citizens of Bangladesh, Cameroon, Nigeria, Senegal and Egypt.

The Sarost 5 has remained in waters a few kilometers from the port of Zarzis for two weeks while awaiting permission from Tunisian authoritie­s to dock there. In recent days, Hajji called on Tunisian authoritie­s in media interviews to help find a solution.

Chahed acknowledg­ed fears that European officials would interpret his country’s acceptance of the 40 migrants as a green light to open migrant screening centers in Tunisia. Chahed reiterated that Tunisia opposes hosting a migrant reception center.

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