African migrants suffer under crackdown in Tunisia
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[March 01, 2023]
By Angus McDowall
TUNIS (Reuters) - Since Tunisia's president announced a crackdown on
illegal immigration last week using language the African Union denounced
as racialised, Malian construction worker Mohamed Kony has been evicted
from his apartment and sacked from his job.
Unemployed, homeless and without legal residency, he now fears he will
face the fate of several of his friends who have been attacked on the
street.
"I am confused and worried," said Kony, 32, who has lived in Tunis for
five years and appeared well liked in his neighbourhood, where Tunisian
residents said they enjoyed his cheerful demeanour and often employed
him for small repair jobs.
"I can't believe we are a problem here," he said, his eyes skipping to
each end of the road in case of a police car.
Kony's problems began last week, when President Kais Saied said there
had been a conspiracy to change Tunisia's racial makeup, ordering
security forces to stop all illegal immigration and to expel any
migrants living in Tunisia illegally.
"The undeclared goal of the successive waves of illegal immigration is
to consider Tunisia a purely African country that has no affiliation to
the Arab and Islamic nations," he said.
Saied's speech - repeating the "great replacement" theory that political
elites are replacing native inhabitants with immigrant supporters - was
called "shocking" by the African Union and praised by French far-right
politician Eric Zemmour.
When Saied issued a second statement last week, he denied being racist
and said he only wanted police to implement Tunisian law, but he
repeated the idea that there had been a conspiracy to change Tunisia's
demographics.
Social media has, meanwhile, filled with accounts by darker-skinned
people in Tunisia, including migrants with and without valid visas,
African students and Black Tunisians, of ill treatment and fear.
They have described detentions for not carrying identity papers,
insults, stone throwing, evictions and job losses.
The Tunisian Forum for Economic and Social Rights (FTDES), a group that
works with migrants, said it had documented hundreds of arbitrary
arrests and hundreds of evictions without notice.
More disturbingly, it said it had documented some violent assaults,
including with knives, that police had been slow to respond to. The
Interior Ministry has said it will comply with all national laws and
international treaties with full respect for human rights.
Outside the Ivory Coast's Tunis embassy, dozens of the country's
citizens stood this week, seeking repatriation.
"After the president's speech, we were attacked. We are afraid. We were
kicked out of the house," said one, Berry Dialy Stephan.
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Foufana Abou, an Ivory Coast national
living in Tunisia and seeking repatriation, waits with other
Ivorians near the embassy of Ivory Coast in Tunis, Tunisia February
27, 2023. REUTERS/Jihed Abidellaoui
Another, Foufana Abou, said people in his district had insulted and
attacked him.
"They threw stones and pieces of wood at us," he said. "Why? We are
all Africans!" he added.
CRACKDOWN
Saied's critics say the crackdown is consistent with his
increasingly fiery, conspiracy-laden rhetoric as he pursues a
parallel crackdown on political opponents, accusing them of plotting
against the state with foreign backing.
Both were preceded by social media campaigns among online groups of
Saied supporters that his critics say were increasingly intertwined
with his approach to rule.
It also comes at a difficult time for the president as ultra-low
turnout in parliamentary elections casts doubt over popular support
for his political programme after seizing most powers in 2021, and
amid an economic crisis.
"The presidential campaign aims to create an imaginary enemy for
Tunisians to distract them from their basic problems," said Ramadan
Ben Amor, a spokesperson for FTDES.
After racially charged language by some media commentators, the
journalists syndicate and the independent media regulator both
responded by urging press to be more careful in their language to
avoid racist incitement.
Official figures say there are 21,000 migrants from sub-Saharan
African countries in Tunisia. FTDES said the true figure was likely
higher, but not more than 50,000.
Tunisia introduced visa-free travel for many African countries over
the past decade. Getting a residency permit can be very difficult.
Many migrants in Tunisia aim to cross illegally to Europe but cannot
afford the hundreds of dollars to get to Italy - a journey also
taken by growing numbers of Tunisians.
Mamuella, an Ivorian woman who has stayed inside her apartment in
Tunis for over a week for fear of arrest, said Tunisians had no
reason to fear her or her compatriots.
"We just want to arrive on the other side of the Mediterranean where
we can find opportunity," she said.
(Writing by Angus McDowall; Editing by Bernadette Baum)
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