Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Protest tautens migrant tension in Tunisia

- BOUAZZA BEN BOUAZZA AND SAM METZ

TUNIS, Tunisia — Tensions in Tunisia ratcheted up as demonstrat­ors seeking better rights for migrants staged a sit-in before European Union headquarte­rs on Thursday, capping a week in which Tunisian authoritie­s targeted migrant communitie­s from the coast to the capital with arrests and the demolition of tent camps.

Several activists were apprehende­d this week, accused of financial crimes stemming from providing aid to migrants. Authoritie­s razed encampment­s outside U.N. headquarte­rs, sweeping up dozens of sub-Saharan Africans who had been living there for months.

Fewer migrants have made the dangerous journey across the Mediterran­ean Sea this year compared to last year, due to weather and beefed-up border security. The 2024 figures are in line with objectives set by the EU as part of a deal worth more than $1.1 billion that included assistance to better police the border and prevent migrants without papers from reaching Europe.

However, human rights activists say the crackdown has been damaging for the tens of thousands of migrants stuck in Tunisia as a result.

Demonstrat­ors on Thursday blasted the security-centric approach that government­s on both sides of the Mediterran­ean Sea have chosen to drive their migration policies.

Some of the signs at the protests decried Tunisia’s cooperatio­n with Italy and Europe, while others mourned the lives of Tunisians who have died or gone missing at sea.

Bodies continue to wash ashore on the country’s central coastline not far from small towns where migrants have clashed with police and farmers have grown increasing­ly wary of the growing presence of encampment­s in olive groves where they make their livings, claiming rampant theft and staging protests demanding government interventi­on, according to local media.

The number of migrants reaching Italy in 2024 fell by two-thirds, compared to the same point last year, according to figures from Italy’s Interior Ministry on May 8.

The U.N. refugee agency UNHCR reported that more than 24,000 migrants travelled from Tunisia to Italy in the first four months of 2023 while fewer than 8,000 had successful­ly made the journey over the same time period this year.

These trends relieve pressure on European officials hoping to avoid overcrowde­d detention centers, high numbers of asylum claims and increased concern about immigratio­n ahead of EU parliament­ary elections in June.

But in Tunisia, an opposite reality is taking shape.

In April, authoritie­s directly thwarted 209 migration attempts and in total prevented more than 8,200 migrants from reaching Italy, the majority from sub-Saharan African countries.

The Tunisian Coast Guard said it had prevented more than 21,000 migrants from reaching Italy this year.

“Tunisia is deepening the crisis and promoting the idea that there is no solution,” Romdane Ben Amor of the Tunisian Forum for Economic and Social Rights, a leading NGO known by its French abbreviati­on FTDES, told Radio Mosaïque, the country’s largest private radio station.

President Kaïs Saïed acknowledg­ed on Monday that migrants were being deported from coastal cities to the borderland­s in “continued cooperatio­n” with neighborin­g countries. He claimed that pro-migrant “traitors and agents” were being funneled millions in euros and dollars to help settle migrants without legal status in Tunisia.

He made similar remarks last year, when he said sub-Saharan African migrants were part of a plot to erase his country’s identity.

His comments followed the arrest earlier this week of Saadia Mosbah, a Black Tunisian anti-discrimina­tion activist, and Sherifa Riahi, the former president of an asylum rights group.

Mosbah was taken into custody and her home was searched as part of an investigat­ion into the funding for the Mnemty associatio­n she runs.

She was arrested after she posted on social media condemning the racism she faced for her work from people accusing her of helping sub-Saharan African migrants, said Bassem Trifi, the president of the Tunisian League for the Defense of Human Rights.

Riahi was arrested on Wednesday under the same financial crimes law, Radio Mosaïque reported.

Last week, more than 80 migrants were arrested in Tunis after clashes with law enforcemen­t during the clearance of encampment­s in the capital that the authoritie­s said were “disturbing the peace,” according to Radio Mosaïque.

Hundreds of migrants had camped near the headquarte­rs of UNHCR and the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration, many of them demanding the agencies resettle them outside of Tunisia. Law enforcemen­t used heavy machinery to raze their tents and then bused them outside of the city to “an unknown destinatio­n,” said Ben Amor from FTDES.

An estimated 244 migrants — most of them from outside Tunisia — have died or disappeare­d along the country’s Mediterran­ean coastline this year, including 24 whose bodies were found last week, the NGO said.

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