Tunisia reports increase in migrant interceptions

Tunisian coast guards try to stop migrants at sea during their attempt to cross to Italy, off the coast off Sfax, Tunisia April 27, 2023. (REUTERS)
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Updated 13 May 2024
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Tunisia reports increase in migrant interceptions

  • The National Guard also said it had prevented 21,462 people from entering Tunisia across its borders with Algeria in the west and Libya in the east, four times the 5,256 number from last year

TUNIS: Tunisia on Sunday reported a 22.5 percent rise in the number of migrants “intercepted on shore or rescued at sea” as they attempted to cross the Mediterranean to Italy.
The National Guard reported that more than 21,000 people had been prevented from leaving Tunisian shores or had been rescued during the first four months of 2024.
A press statement from the National Guard, which also overseas Coast Guard operations, said 21,545 people were intercepted between January 1 and April 30, compared with 17,576 over the same period last year.
It said the interceptions occurred in an equivalent number of operations — 751 this year and 756 in 2023.
Tunisia and neighboring Libya have become key departure points for migrants, often from sub-Saharan African countries, who risk perilous Mediterranean sea journeys in the hopes of a better life in Europe.
Since January 1, the bodies of 291 shipwreck victims have been recovered compared with 572 last year in almost triple the number of operations (1,967 this year against 686 in 2023), the statement said.
The National Guard also said it had prevented 21,462 people from entering Tunisia across its borders with Algeria in the west and Libya in the east, four times the 5,256 number from last year.
The number of alleged smugglers and their accomplices detained more than doubled, with 529 arrests and 261 prosecutions, up from 203 and 121 respectively last year.
Sfax, the North African country’s second city, remained the main point of departure for clandestine attempts to reach the Italian island of Lampedusa less than 150 kilometers (90 miles) away.
The National Guard said 19,457 would-be migrants were prevented from making the perilous journey in the first four months of 2024, as opposed to 15,468 last year.
Last year many thousands of people from sub-Saharan countries fleeing poverty and conflict, notably in Sudan, and thousands of Tunisians seeking to escape the country’s economic and political crisis attempted to make the crossing.
At Italian instigation, the European Union signed an agreement last summer to provide 255 million euros in financial aid to debt-ridden Tunisia in return for a commitment to curb migrant departures.
According to Romdhane Ben Amor, spokesman for the Tunisian Forum for Social and Economic Rights NGO, the state’s approach to the problem “is not one of rescue but of interception.”
A recent report by the UN’s International Organization for Migration said that over the past decade more than 27,000 migrants have died trying to make the crossing, over 3,000 of them in the past year alone.
 

 


Settlers launch multiple attacks on West Bank villages

Israeli soldiers stand guard during a weekly settlers’ tour in Hebron in the Israeli-occupied West Bank on Saturday. (Reuters)
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Settlers launch multiple attacks on West Bank villages

  • Armed raids, assaults continue against Palestinian residents under Israeli military protection

RAMALLAH: Armed Israeli settlers attacked the villages of Al-Mughayir, located northeast of Ramallah, and Yabrud to the east on Saturday, according to local sources.

The sources told the Palestinian Wafa news agency that settlers stormed the Al-Qala’a area east of Al-Mughayir and fired live bullets at residents who confronted them, though no injuries were reported.
The sources added that Israeli forces stormed the area, deploying sound grenades and tear gas against residents, and spread throughout the old park of the village and near homes.
Also, settlers attacked residents near Yabrud, while two armed colonists trespassed on Palestinian-owned lands in Umm Safa, northwest of Ramallah.
Also on Saturday, settlers stormed the Bedouin village of Shalal Al-Auja, located to the north of the city of Jericho.
According to local sources, dozens of Israeli settlers raided the community, spread out among residents’ homes, and deliberately grazed their livestock on farmlands, causing massive damage to crops.
The attacks comes as part of a systematic policy targeting Bedouin communities, aimed at depriving the population of the most basic necessities of life and pushing them towards forced displacement.
Settlers attacked a young man from the town of Beit Furik, east of Nablus, on Saturday as he was traveling along the road connecting the towns of Biddya and Saniriya, west of Salfit.
Local sources said that the group attacked Sharhabil Al-Tawil, assaulting him before seizing his vehicle.
A settler, under the protection of the Israeli army, grazed his sheep on Saturday on Palestinian-owned land in the village of Al-Mughayyir, east of Ramallah.
Local sources said that the settler grazed his sheep in the southern part of the village before residents confronted him.
The sources added that Israeli forces then raided the area, fired live ammunition toward residents, and forced them to return to their homes to provide protection for the colonists.
According to AFP, Israeli forces arrested three suspects after dozens of Israeli settlers stormed an area near a West Bank village on Thursday, injuring two Palestinians and vandalizing property.
The army said that soldiers were dispatched after receiving news of “dozens of masked Israeli suspects vandalizing property in the area” of Shavei Shomron, an Israeli settlement near Nablus.
The settlers “set Palestinian vehicles on fire” and “attacked a Palestinian who was inside one of the vehicles,” the army said, adding that two Palestinians were injured as a result.