Tunisia intercepts more than 650 migrants

Migrants swim next to their overturned wooden boat during a rescue operation. (AP)
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Updated 15 August 2022
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Tunisia intercepts more than 650 migrants

TUNIS: Tunisian authorities said on Monday they intercepted or rescued more than 650 migrants trying to reach Europe by sea at the weekend, the latest of numerous such cases in the past two months.

Tunisia and Libya are the main points of departure for migrants trying to reach Europe from Africa. Sea crossing attempts tend to increase during spring and summer.

The Italian island of Lampedusa is just 140 km from Tunisia’s east coast.

In total, 657 people were rescued or prevented from trying to cross in 46 separate incidents between Friday and Monday, maritime and military officials said.

The coast guard thwarted 10 attempted crossings on Sunday night, bringing ashore 156 would-be migrants, the National Guard said in a statement Monday.

Two-thirds of them were from sub-Saharan Africa and the rest were Tunisians.

The previous night, the National Guard said it had foiled 11 other attempts, preventing 219 people from migrating, including 113 from sub-Saharan African countries.

Defense Ministry spokesman Mohammed Zekri, meanwhile, said that 42 Egyptians who had set sail from Libya were rescued on Sunday off Kerkennah, central Tunisia, after their boat sank and they took refuge on an oil platform.

After a similar incident in the same zone the previous weekend, 10 Tunisian migrants were feared to have drowned while 20 were saved.

Tunisian authorities also said 15 members of a family from Hammamet in central Tunisia, including five women and four small children, were prevented from heading out to sea on Friday night.

They had paid around 50,000 dinars ($15,900) for a boat, two motors and life jackets, a security source told Mosaique FM radio.

Also on Friday, the National Guard said 225 migrants were intercepted in 23 attempted crossings from different points on Tunisia’s coast.

Tunisia is in the throes of political and economic crises, and Libya has been gripped by lawlessness since 2011 that has seen militias turn to people trafficking.


Israeli military says it will pursue every successor of Iran’s Khamenei

Updated 58 min 52 sec ago
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Israeli military says it will pursue every successor of Iran’s Khamenei

  • The clerical body that will choose Iran’s next supreme leader has more or less reached a majority consensus
  • Minor disagreement over whether their final ⁠decision must follow an ‌in-person meeting or instead ‌be issued

The Israeli military warned it would continue pursuing every successor of Iran’s next ‌supreme ‌leader.
In a ‌post ⁠on X in ⁠Farsi, the Israeli military also warned it would ⁠pursue every ‌person ‌who seeks ‌to ‌appoint a successor for Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, ‌referring to the clerical body ⁠charged with ⁠choosing the Islamic Republic’s supreme leader.
The clerical body that will choose Iran’s next supreme leader, succeeding the slain Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has more or less reached a majority consensus, Assembly of Experts member Ayatollah Mohammadmehdi Mirbaqeri said on Sunday.
The Mehr news agency quoted him as saying “some obstacles” still ‌needed to ‌be resolved regarding the ‌process.
On ⁠Saturday, a senior ⁠cleric in the Assembly of Experts said its members would meet “within one day” to choose the leader.
Iranian media said the group had a minor disagreement over whether their final ⁠decision must follow an ‌in-person meeting or instead ‌be issued without adhering to this ‌formality.
Ayatollah Mohsen Heidari Alekasir, another member ‌of the Assembly of Experts, said in a video released by Nournews on Sunday that an in-person meeting by the ‌assembly for a final vote was not possible under current conditions.
He ⁠said ⁠a candidate had been picked, based on the late supreme leader’s advice that Iran’s top leader should “be hated by the enemy” instead of praised by it.
“Even the Great Satan (US) has mentioned his name,” Heidari Alekasir said of the chosen successor, days after US President Donald Trump said that Khamenei’s son, Mojtaba, was an “unacceptable” choice for him.