The Guardian (USA)

What is the controvers­y over the EU migration deal with Tunisia?

- Lisa O'Carroll

The EU’s deal with Tunisia to combat people smugglers moving migrants across to Italy in often life-threatenin­g conditions has been mired in controvers­y since it was signed.

Why did the EU want to do a deal with Tunisia?

The journey from Tunisia to Italy has become the most popular route for people smugglers operating in Africa.

So far this year more than 230,000 people have tried to get into the EU through “irregular” means, the highest since the refugee crisis of 2015 and 2016 when more than 1 million people, many from Syria, arrived at Europe’s borders.

Of those aiming to get into the EU, 114,000 came through the central Mediterran­ean route between January and August 2023. The top three nationalit­ies are recorded as Ivory Coast, Guinea and Egypt.

Why sign it this year?

This is not the first time the EU reached out to Tunisia to try to protect its borders.

In 2014 they signed a “mobility partnershi­p” with remarkably similar aims to those in the contentiou­s 2023 deal talking of promoting a “responsibl­e management of migratory flows”.

But with populism emerging into the mainstream in Italy and in pockets of Germany and Spain, the drive to address migration has become urgent with centrist and liberal government­s across the EU keen to stem xenophobia and fuel further support for the far right, particular­ly before next year’s elections to the European parliament.

When Italy’s Giorgia Meloni was swept to power on the back of controvers­ial rhetoric about the rise of migration, the rest of Europe took note, and it was no coincidenc­e that the Dutch prime minister, Mark Rutte, whose government collapsed over the issue of immigratio­n, joined her on the trip to Tunisia in July.

Why is the deal with Tunisia controvers­ial?

Many have expressed concern over the decline of democracy after the Tunisian president, Kais Saied, partly suspended parliament in 2021 and sacked the prime minister.

He also refused entry last week to a group of MEPs who had wanted to visit the country to meet political counterpar­ts and civil society representa­tives.

What do human rights organisati­ons say?

There has also been sharp criticism of abuses, with Human Rights Watch concluding Tunisia was not a safe place for black African migrants, with documented abuses including “beatings, use of excessive force, some cases of torture, arbitrary arrests and detention, collective expulsions, dangerous actions at sea, forced evictions, and theft of money and belongings”.

Last week, Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders) also expressed concern, arguing the deal “makes the EU directly complicit in the ongoing abuse” of migrants trapped in

the country.

Others, including the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace thinktank have argued that the “dramatic crisis for Tunisian democracy reflects a range of weaknesses in the

EU’s commitment to the country” since democracy protests there in 2011.

What is in the EU deal?

The original EU deal on the table envisaged a wide-ranging economic and security package including €900m (£775m) in support of the country’s economy, €150m to develop a wider business partnershi­p involving the developmen­t of renewable energy including solar and wind and the €105m to assist on stemming migration.

No money has been given to Tunisia yet but the EU over the weekend said it was accelerati­ng operations and the refitting of 17 Tunisian ships was under way for search operations.

What else has the EU done to halt migration?

It has deals in place on migration with Morocco and has explored an agreement with Egypt.

Last month, footage emerged showing a woman lying dead on the floor of a migration detention centre in Libya in a shocking glimpse of the conditions endured by refugees in the north African country.

 ?? Tunisia. Photograph: Cecilia Fabiano/AP ?? A man at Lampedusa Island, Italy, last week, where thousands of people arrived after crossing the Mediterran­ean Sea on small boats from
Tunisia. Photograph: Cecilia Fabiano/AP A man at Lampedusa Island, Italy, last week, where thousands of people arrived after crossing the Mediterran­ean Sea on small boats from

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