African Refugees in Tunisia Demand Evacuation to Different Countries
African migrants gather outside the UN office in the Tunisian capital, Tunis, on April 18, 2022, on the third day of a sit-in to demand to be evacuated to another country.
Africa News with AFP
Dozens of refugees and migrants in Tunisia are demanding evacuation to other countries.
The refugees, mostly survivors of illegal immigration attempts by sea to Europe, have been staging a sit-in in front of the office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in the Tunisian capital, Tunis since Saturday.
"We need to be evacuated," reads a banner they have hung at the entrance to the building.
Equipped with blankets, the refugees, many of whom are women and children, spend the night on cardboard boxes spread out on the ground amid suitcases containing their personal belongings.
They denounced the United Nations' inaction.
"The real problem is, the UN commission has abandoned its main role, which is our protection. Instead of doing that, it has left us on the street. We were living in Zarzis, and the UN commission demanded our evacuation from there, cut off all funds and stopped protecting us." Saleh Saeed, Sudanese from Darfur who refused refugee status told the AFP.
19-year-old Mohamed Nour from Chad also claimed there have been instances of racism against them which makes life difficult. We have been attacked in our homes. We just want to be evacuated from this country."
Migrants and refugees in Tunisia, particularly from sub-Saharan Africa, regularly complain of being subjected to verbal and physical abuse in Tunisia.
The majority of these migrants were rescued off the coast of Tunisia after their boats capsized while they were trying to reach the European continent clandestinely.
According to statistics from the Tunisian Forum for Economic and Social Rights, the Tunisian coastguard intercepted 25,657 migrants attempting to cross the Mediterranean in 2021, almost double the number from the previous year.
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