Marin Independent Journal

Migrants face misery in Tunisia; will EU deal will make it worse?

- By Bouazza Ben Bouazza and Elaine Ganley

Migrants in Tunisia's port city of Sfax who are aiming to make Europe their new home are now sharing the burden and the blame for escalating tensions deeply tinged with racism, amid the fears of European leaders who are trying to stanch the numbers of people arriving at their shores.

The antagonism that exploded in recent weeks in Sfax between Tunisians and mainly Black sub-Saharan migrants is widely seen as a turning point in how this North African nation deals with migration.

European leaders are offering millions to Tunisia amid the abuses, and activists fear a migration summit in Rome on Sunday will pursue an anti-migrant vision that puts the onus on Africa to keep Africans out of Europe.

Hundreds of migrants have drowned at sea trying to reach Italy in fragile boats, but now migrants awaiting their chance to cross the Mediterran­ean cower in fear, some beaten or bused by authoritie­s to new destinatio­ns, others dumped in the desert.

Musa Khalid from Congo was among a group of migrants expelled from Tunisia and found by Libyan border guards huddling in a barren zone last weekend. He said that Tunisian officials took their belongings and money before transferri­ng them out of the Tunisian port city of Sfax and dropping them off without food or water.

“As we tried to enter Tunisia again, they beat us badly. They broke my hand and hit my head,” he told the Associated Press near the Al Assa border point in Libya, holding up a wrist wrapped in cloth. “We are in the desert now for several

days. Sir, please.”

Human rights activists from North Africa, West Africa and Europe met in Tunis this week and denounced the upcoming Rome meeting, predicting that it will amount to a bartering of values for financial incentives to stave off migrants from European shores.

“Today, the Mediterran­ean's calling is no longer to be a bridge between two shores, but a wall separating all of Europe from all of the African continent,” said the Tunisian Forum for Economic and Social Rights, which organized the Thursday meeting.

Italy is trying to decrease the number of migrant arrivals and stabilize Tunisia, in its worst economic crisis in a generation. Thousands of migrants have arrived in Sfax this year, but there's no solid figure of how many are in the city, or how many have left since the anti-migrant campaign started.

Tunisia has become the main stepping stone to Italy, Europe's gateway, replacing Libya, where widespread abuse of migrants has been reported. Of the 76,325 migrant arrivals in

Italy so far this year until last Sunday, 44,151 took the sea route from Tunisia compared to 28,842 leaving from Libya, according to the U.N. High Commission­er for Refugees.

That is pushing up numbers in the reception center in Italy's southernmo­st island of Lampedusa, with officials saying 2,500 people were at the site on Sunday following the arrival of 266 overnight.

President Kais Saied, Tunisia's increasing­ly authoritar­ian leader, stoked racist reactions to migrants in February, saying that subSaharan Africans arriving in huge numbers are part of a plot to erase Tunisia's Islamic identity. He has since tried to walk back such pronouncem­ents, denying racist views and saying the migrant issue must be treated at its roots.

That's one intent of the Rome conference, which will gather nearly 20 heads of state and government or ministers from the Middle East to the Sahel and North Africa, along with European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen and an array of financial institutio­ns.

The one-day summit is part of Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni's efforts to position Italy at the center of issues impacting the Mediterran­ean. The conference aims to come up with concrete proposals to decrease migration numbers by addressing the root causes, while combating migrant traffickin­g. It will also discuss energy policies, including ways to diversify energy sources, and climate change.

It's widely viewed by human rights advocates as a road map for what is to come.

The Rome summit comes a week after Saied signed a memorandum of understand­ing for a “comprehens­ive strategic partnershi­p” in a meeting that included Meloni and von der Leyen. Financial details weren't released, but the EU has held out the promise of nearly 1 billion euros ($1.1 billion) to help restart Tunisia's hobbled economy, and 100 million euros ($111 million) for border control as well as search and rescue missions at sea and repatriati­ng immigrants without residence permits.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Migrants, mainly from sub-Saharan Africa, are stopped by Tunisian Maritime National Guard at sea during an attempt to get to Italy, near the coast of Sfax, Tunisia, on April 18.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Migrants, mainly from sub-Saharan Africa, are stopped by Tunisian Maritime National Guard at sea during an attempt to get to Italy, near the coast of Sfax, Tunisia, on April 18.

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