Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

European leaders offer over $1B in aid to prop up Tunisia

- BOUAZZA BEN BOUAZZA AND ANGELA CHARLTON Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Frances D’Emilio, Colleen Barry and Lorne Cook of The Associated Press.

TUNIS, Tunisia — European leaders visiting Tunisia on Sunday held out the promise of more than $1 billion in financial aid to rescue its teetering economy and better police its borders, in an effort to restore stability to the North African country — and to stem migration from its shores to Europe.

A Tunisian rights group denounced the EU proposal as “blackmail,” saying it would worsen abuses of migrants and was aimed at closing Europe’s doors to those in need.

Tunisia’s increasing­ly autocratic president hosted the leaders of Italy, the Netherland­s and the European Commission for talks aimed at smoothing the way for an internatio­nal financial bailout of the troubled country.

On the eve of the talks, Tunisian President Kais Saied made an unannounce­d visit to a migrant camp in the coastal city of Sfax, a central jumping-off point for boat journeys crossing the Mediterran­ean to Italy. Saied spoke with families living in the camp, and pleaded for internatio­nal aid for Africans who converge on Tunisia as a transit point to reach Europe.

His caring words — and sympatheti­c images of the president with migrant babies posted on his Facebook page — contrasted sharply with Saied’s stance earlier this year. He stoked racist abuse of Black African migrants in Tunisia with a speech railing against a perceived plot to erase his country’s Arab identity.

The president and Tunisian Prime Minister Najla Bouden met Sunday with Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni, Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.

After the talks, von der Leyen announced a five-point program to support Tunisia, including up to $1.1 billion in aid for Tunisia’s indebted budget. The plan will be discussed with all 27 EU countries at their next summit in late June, she said.

In addition, the EU is discussing investment in highspeed broadband and other digital infrastruc­ture for Tunisia, and $323 million in hydrogen and other renewable energy projects, von der Leyen said.

The plan also includes $108 million for Tunisian border operations, including search-and-rescue and anti-smuggling operations, she said. Amid criticism from migrant advocacy groups about forced repatriati­ons and abuses of migrants in Tunisia, von der Leyen and Rutte insisted the program would respect human rights.

The aim is to “kill that cynical business model of the boat smuggler. Migration is at this moment one of the most important issues facing all of us,” Rutte said.

The Tunisian Forum for Economic and Social Rights, which advocates for migrants, expressed concern about the European aid offer.

“Europe has not seen Tunisia as a country in need of cooperatio­n based on genuine democracy guaranteei­ng rights and freedoms, but merely as an advanced border point requiring more equipment to contain immigratio­n, with the aim that no one should be able to reach Europe,” it said in a statement Sunday.

“Their visits conceal blackmail and an attempt to haggle: money and aid in exchange for the role of border policeman.”

Stemming migration is especially important for the farright Meloni, who was making her second trip in a week to Tunisia. Italy is the destinatio­n for most Europe-bound migrants leaving from the North African nation.

Meloni welcomed Sunday’s announceme­nts and said she hoped they paved the way for Tunisia to receive $1.9 billion in stalled Internatio­nal Monetary Fund support.

Saied has balked at conditions for the IMF money, which include cuts to subsidies on flour and fuel, cuts to the large public administra­tion sector, and the privatizat­ion of loss-making public companies.

The president warns such moves would unleash social unrest, and bristles at what he calls Western diktats. But the economy is heading toward collapse and the population is already restive, disillusio­ned with both Saied’s leadership and the country’s decade-long experiment with democracy.

That has pushed more and more Tunisians to risk dangerous boat journeys across the Mediterran­ean to seek a better life. Tunisia is also a major migratory transit point for sub-Saharan Africans heading for Europe.

“Tunisia is a priority, because destabiliz­ation in Tunisia would have serious repercussi­ons on the stability of all Northern Africa, and those repercussi­ons inevitably arrive here,” Meloni said Thursday.

Saied didn’t immediatel­y respond to the European offer.

 ?? (AP/Italian Premier Office) ?? Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte (from left), European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, Tunisian President Kais Saied and Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni meet on Sunday in Tunis. Tunisia’s president is hosting the leaders for talks aimed at smoothing the way for an internatio­nal bailout. The European leaders want to restore stability to a country that has become a major source of migration to Europe.
(AP/Italian Premier Office) Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte (from left), European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, Tunisian President Kais Saied and Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni meet on Sunday in Tunis. Tunisia’s president is hosting the leaders for talks aimed at smoothing the way for an internatio­nal bailout. The European leaders want to restore stability to a country that has become a major source of migration to Europe.

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