Tag: Tunisian

  • Concert by Tunisian singer canceled due to Palestinian concerts

    Concert by Tunisian singer canceled due to Palestinian concerts

    Emel Mathlouthi, a Tunisian singer known as the voice of Tunisia’s uprising in 2011, faced consequences after performing in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

    Her upcoming show at the Hammamet International Festival in Tunisia was cancelled following accusations from pro-Palestinian campaigners who claimed she was promoting “normalisation” with Israel.

    Last month, Mathlouthi had performed in Bethlehem, Ramallah, and East Jerusalem to Palestinian audiences.

    However, she asserted that she did not perform in Israel and was the victim of a “big misinformation campaign.” She expressed her disappointment over the cancellation, stating that it was unjustified considering the circumstances.

  • Tunisian coast guard pulls 13 bodies of migrants from the sea

    Tunisian coast guard pulls 13 bodies of migrants from the sea

    In the aftermath of a shipwreck off the coast of Sfax, where violent skirmishes between migrants and locals broke out last week, the Tunisian coastguard said on Thursday that it had found the dead of 13 migrants.

    A rights organization in Tunisia issued a warning over the plight of migrants turned away from the port of Sfax and demanded the establishment of temporary shelters to house them.

    Following the execution of a Tunisian man on July 3 in an incident between locals and migrants, racial tensions erupted, forcing hundreds of migrants to flee or be forcibly removed from Tunisia’s second-largest city.

    FTDES’s (Tunisian Forum for Economic and Social Rights) spokeswoman, Romdhane Ben Amor,

    “Conditions are very difficult and all scenarios are possible due to the arid climate and inhuman conditions in which sub-Saharan migrants find themselves in Sfax. Hundreds of sub-Saharan migrants are homeless in Sfax. Their number exceeds a thousand people. Other migrants have chosen to hide out in the villages and rural areas around the city of Sfax.”

    Neïla Zoghlami, chairwoman of the Tunisian Association of Democratic Women (ATFD) supported FTDES’s notion;

    “We received testimonies from sub-Saharan women who were exposed to a lot of violence after the February 21, 2023 speech, and we also received the case of a woman who was raped by four people.

    “Last night, units affiliated with the Sfax maritime region thwarted an attempted illegal crossing and rescued 25 sub-Saharan migrants, but 13 bodies were also recovered,” the coastguard statement said.

    Sfax is the North African country’s second largest city and a departure point for migrants seeking to reach European shores across the Mediterranean.

    Many attempt the perilous voyage in makeshift boats, and the International Organization for Migration says nearly 2,500 have died or disappeared in the Mediterranean this year alone.

    The Italian island of Lampedusa is about 130 kilometres (80 miles) from the Tunisian coast, and a target destination for many of the attempts.

    Last week Sfax was the scene of fierce clashes after a Tunisian resident of the city was stabbed to death in a clash with migrants on July 3.

    Hundreds of migrants from sub-Saharan Africa fled or were forcibly expelled from the city. Rights groups say the authorities took them to remote desert areas near the borders with Libya and Algeria and left them there.

    Between 100 and 150 migrants were still stranded at the border with Libya near the militarised zone of Ras Jedir by Thursday evening, according to Human Rights Watch.

    They had no access to water, shelter or food, the New York-based watchdog said, though it had earlier indicated that the migrants there had been moved.

    On Wednesday, stranded migrants had launched a distress call in a video transmitted to AFP, saying they had children and pregnant women among them.

    The Tunisian Red Crescent earlier said it has provided shelter to about 630 migrants stranded at the border with Libya between Sunday and Monday.

    HRW said another group of about 200 migrants had been left to fend for themselves at Tunisia’s militarised border with Algeria, with rescue teams en route to help them.

    Witnesses told AFP convoys had dropped off dozens of migrants in various areas along Tunisia’s 1,000-kilometre (600-mile) border with Algeria.

    Tunisia has seen a rise in racially motivated attacks after President Kais Saied in February accused “hordes” of undocumented migrants of bringing violence, and alleging a “criminal plot” to change the country’s demographic make-up.

  • Tunisian migrants in police grips over stabbing of man

    Tunisian migrants in police grips over stabbing of man

    Three African migrants have been apprehended as suspects in the fatal stabbing of a local man in the coastal city of Sfax, Tunisia.

    The incident occurred during a confrontation between residents and migrants from sub-Saharan Africa, with the victim being stabbed during the altercation.

    According to Faouzi Masmoudi, spokesperson for the city’s prosecutor, the three suspects are from Cameroon. In response to potential reprisals, police have been stationed outside the migrants’ residence.

    Anti-migrant sentiment

    The event occurred following months of rising tensions between Tunisians and migrants.

    Locals in Sfax, Tunisia’s second-largest city, often protest the migrants’ presence in the city, which serves as a departure point for many migrants attempting to reach Italy.

    In February, President Kais Saied accused “hordes” of illegal migrants of bringing violence, crime and “unacceptable practices”, prompting a rise in racially motivated attacks on migrants and foreign students.

    In late May, police arrested three Tunisians on suspicion of stabbing to death a migrant from Benin. 

    Tunisian economic crisis

    Tunisia hosts an estimated 21 000 migrants from other parts of Africa, out of a population of 12 million, representing 0.2 percent. 

    Though some of those migrants come to Tunisia to study, many hope to use the country as a springboard to reach Europe across the Mediterranean sea. 

    Amid an economic crisis in the country, Tunisians themselves are also joining the exodus. 

    Tunisian is highly indebted and in talks for a bailout loan from the International Monetary Fund. However, Saied has repeatedly rejected what he terms the “diktats” of the Washington-based IMF.

  • Protests at funeral of Tunisian footballer who set himself on fire

    Protests at funeral of Tunisian footballer who set himself on fire

    A football player from Tunisia, Nizar Issaoui, set himself on fire in a protest against “police injustice” and later perished from the wounds he received, according to his family.

    He had appeared in a video posted online showing him shouting that he had been accused of terrorism by officers after a dispute with a fruit seller.

    In a separate post, he said he sentenced himself to “death by fire”.

    There were angry clashes at funeral of the 35-year-old on Friday in his home town of Haffouz, local media reported.

    Issaoui had been accused of terrorism by police officers after he complained that he was unable to buy bananas for less than 10 dinars ($3.30; £2.66) a kilogram, double the price set by the government, reports say.

    In a Facebook post, the footballer had written: “For a dispute with someone selling bananas at 10 dinars, I get accused of terrorism at the police station. Terrorism for a complaint about bananas… I have no more energy. Let the police state know that the sentence will be executed today.”

    In protest, Issaoui burned himself to death.

    Violence erupted at the footballer’s funeral as demonstrators threw stones at police who fired tear gas.

    He was a former player for the Tunisian top-flight side US Monastir and a father of four.

    His brother told local reporters that Issauoi suffered third-degree burns and doctors were not able to save his life.

    His action was an echo of a 2010 protest when street vendor Mohamed Bouazizi set himself alight. That kicked off a wave of demonstrations that led to the overthrow of President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali the following year.

    The current President, Kais Saied, sparked controversy in 2021 when he sacked the prime minister and suspended parliament. He has since pushed through a new constitution enshrining his dominance.

    The Tunisian government has not commented on Issaoui’s death.

  • Tunisia opposition condemns ‘baseless’ arrests

    Tunisia opposition condemns ‘baseless’ arrests

    Tunisia’s main opposition coalition has described the string of arrests targeting critics of President Kais Saied as “repressive, violent and legally baseless”.

    In recent days police have detained several prominent politicians, two judges, a leading journalist and a senior union official.

    On Wednesday, the US said it was “deeply concerned” by the reported arrests in recent days.

    “We respect the aspirations of the Tunisian people for an independent and transparent judiciary that is able to protect fundamental freedoms for all,” State Department spokesman Ned Price said.

    Eighteen months ago President Saied shut down Tunisia’s parliament and moved to rule by decree before rewriting the country’s constitution.

    He’s been accused of mounting a coup.

    The UN has voiced alarm over the arrests, but the president has insisted those detained are traitors, responsible for soaring price increases and severe food shortages.

    Source: BBC

  • Tunisian fans celebrate win over France

    Tunisian fans celebrate their surprise 1-0 win over France, but it isn’t enough to prevent them leaving the World Cup without progressing from Group D.

    Wahbi Khazi’s goal was the difference between the two sides, but with Australia beating Denmark 1-0 in the other game, it is France and Australia who progress.

    But in stoppage time, the Tunisians on the sidelines were more interested in the other Group D game, crowding around a TV screen on the bench hoping Denmark would be able to score against Australia — a circumstance that would have lifted Tunisia into second place and also into the round of 16 in Qatar.

    “We were praying for a Denmark goal but it never game,” Khazri said. “But that’s the thing with soccer, you should only count on yourself. We didn’t do enough in the first two games, otherwise we’d be through.”

    France ended up winning the group with six points, ahead of Australia on goal difference. Tunisia finished with four points in third place. Denmark, which lost to Australia 1-0, ended up in last place with one point.

    Meanwhile, the French soccer federation is filing a complaint with FIFA over Antoine Griezmann’s disallowed goal at the end of their loss to Tunisia.

    Griezmann was in an offside position when a cross came over but then retreated and appeared to be played back despite the referee having blown the whistle to terminate the game.

     

    Source: Africa News

     

  • Tunisia policemen jailed over football fan’s death

    Twelve Tunisian policemen have been jailed for two years over the death of a football fan.

    Nineteen-year-old Omar Laabidi drowned in a stream in 2018 while trying to escape as the police chased a group of fans to the edge of the stream.

    Laabidi is reported to have screamed that he could not swim before jumping into the water to escape the police. Laabidi’s dead body was found the following day.

    Witnesses say they had heard officers shout at him “you just have to learn how to swim”, which has since become a rallying cry on social media with the hashtag #ApprendsÀNager used by people seeking justice for police abuses.

    The victim’s family has said they will appeal against the sentence, calling the conviction for manslaughter a “charade of justice”.

    Source: BBC

  • Tunisian navy rescues 194 illegal migrants

    The Tunisian navy announced the rescue of 194 illegal migrants intercepted at sea while crossing the Mediterranean heading to Europe.

    According to Tuesday’s announcement, the rescue involved nine different operations during two days.

    Most migrants are Tunisian and 76 originated from sub-Saharan African countries, including 42 women and eight children.

    On Monday, eight bodies of migrants, probably Tunisians who had been missing for a fortnight, were recovered from the sea off southeast Tunisia, according to the local Red Crescent.

    According to official figures, since the beginning of the year more than 22,500 migrants have been intercepted off the Tunisian coast. Of these, nearly 11,000 originated from sub-Saharan Africa.

    According to the European agency Frontex, the central Mediterranean route was used by more than 42,500 migrants from January to July, an increase of 44% compared to the first seven months of 2021.

    Source: African News

  • Passion for purple revives ancient dye in Tunisia

    A Tunisian man has pieced together bits of a local secret linked to ancient emperors: how to make a prized purple dye using the guts of a sea snail.
    “At the beginning, I didn’t know where to start,” said Mohamed Ghassen Nouira, who heads a consulting firm.

    “I would crush the whole shell and try to understand how this small marine animal released such a precious colour.”

    Now, after years of trial and error – and after getting used to the foul stench – he uses a hammer and small stone mortar to carefully break open the spiny murex shells.

    What happens next is part of a secret guarded so closely that it disappeared hundreds of years ago.

    A symbol of power and prestige, the celebrated purple colour was traditionally used for royal and imperial robes.

    Production of the dye was among the main sources of wealth for the ancient Phoenicians, and then for the Carthaginian and Roman empires, said Ali Drine, who heads the research division of Tunisia’s National Heritage Institute.

    The industry was “under the control of the emperors because it brought a lot of money to the imperial coffers”, he said.

    In August 2007 on a Tunisian beach, Nouira found a shell releasing a purplish red colour, reminding him of something he’d learnt in history class at school.

    He bought more shells from local fishermen and set out experimenting in an old outside kitchen at his father’s house that he still uses as a workshop.

    Secret know-how
    “Experts in dyeing, archaeology and history, as well as chemistry, helped and encouraged me, but nobody knew the technique,” Nouira said.

    No historical documents clearly detail the production methods for the purple pigment, Drine said.

    “Maybe because the artisans did not want to divulge the secrets of their know-how, or they were afraid to because the production of purple was directly associated with the emperors, who tolerated no rivalry,” he said.

    The only clues for unearthing the techniques lie in archaeological sites and artefacts in the Mediterranean, particularly in Tyre in southern Lebanon, and Meninx, on the coast of Tunisia’s Djerba island.

    Phoenicians from Tyre set down the foundations of what would become the Carthaginian empire on the Tunisian coasts.

    Also known as Tyrian purple, the pigment is still highly valued today and is produced by just a handful of people around the world.

    They include a German painter and a Japanese enthusiast, each with their own secret techniques.

    Among the buyers are collectors, artists and researchers.

    The dye can cost $2,800 per gramme from some European traders, and prices can reach up to $4,000, Nouira said.

    He said he had produced a total of several dozen grammes of the pure purple dye, which he sells internationally for more modest prices.

    ‘Not a cooking recipe’
    Nouira said that when he sought help from other dye-makers, one told him bluntly, “‘it’s not a cooking recipe to be passed around.’”

    “That made me even more determined. It drove me to read more and redouble my efforts.”

    In a wooden box where he keeps his stock, ranging from indigo blue to violet, Nouira carefully guards a dye sample from 2009 – a “dear memento of my first success”.

    “I improved my methods until I found the right technique and mastered it from 2013-2014,” he said.

    To obtain one gramme of pure purple dye, Nouira said he had to shell 100 kilogrammes of murex, a task that takes him two weekends.

    He washes the marine snails and sorts them by species and size, then carefully breaks the upper part of the shells to extract the gland that, after oxidisation, produces the purple colour.

    Nouira said his greatest wish was to see his work exhibited in Tunisian museums.

    “Purple has great tourist potential,” he added, expressing a desire to one day also conduct workshops.

    But he lamented what he said was the authorities’ lack of interest in the craft.

    In the meantime, he too is keeping his trade secrets close, and said he hoped to pass them on to his children.

    “I’m very satisfied, and I’m also proud to have revived something related to our Carthaginian ancestors.”

    Source: AFP NEWS AGENCY

  • Tunisian prime minister resigns, political sources say

    Tunisian Prime Minister Elyes Fakhfakh has presented his resignation to President Kais Saied, political sources told Reuters, after the biggest party in his coalition began pushing for a vote of no confidence in the government.

    Saied now has a week to nominate a replacement as prime minister, who will have two months to form a new government and pass it through parliament.

    Source: reuters.com

  • Tunisia confirms second coronavirus case

    Tunisian authorities have confirmed the country’s second case of coronavirus on Sunday.

    The latest patient is a 65-year-year old Tunisian man who had returned from Italy.

    He has been quarantined at a university hospital, according to a statement by the health ministry.

    No other details were provided.

    The first patient – also a Tunisian man who had entered the country by Italy but in this instance by boat – is said to be “improving” but remains under observation in a hospital in the resort city of Sousse, according to a health official.

    Earlier this month, Tunisia suspended its passenger ferry service from the northern Italian city of Genoa, a few days after the first case of coronavirus was confirmed.

    All flights to Italian cities were also moved to a separate terminal at Tunis’ international airport.

    Source: bbc.com