Families of jailed Tunisians to urge ICC to probe migrant abuse: Report | Migration News


Lawyer main case says Worldwide Prison Court docket should act with ‘full power … to guard these most susceptible’.

Kinfolk of jailed Tunisian opposition figures plan to file a submission to the Worldwide Prison Court docket (ICC) to analyze alleged rights violations in opposition to migrants and refugees within the nation, The Guardian newspaper experiences.

The transfer deliberate for subsequent week by the group, which previously petitioned The Hague-based court docket to probe alleged political persecution in Tunisia, comes amid new experiences that Black migrants in Tunisia are struggling far-reaching abuse, together with sexual violence, from safety forces.

“The ICC has the jurisdiction to analyze these alleged crimes in opposition to humanity and will act with the total power of worldwide regulation to guard these most susceptible,” the British newspaper quoted Rodney Dixon KC, the lawyer heading the case, as saying.

The report by the newspaper on Friday adopted its investigation this week into allegations of abuses dedicated by European Union-funded safety forces.

Desert expulsions

Tunisia’s remedy of sub-Saharan African migrants, who usually journey to the nation as a springboard to achieve Europe by sea, has come beneath scrutiny because it struck a 100 million euro ($112m) deal with the EU in July 2023 to assist it fight undocumented migration.

The identical month, Tunisian authorities rounded up hundreds of Black migrants and refugees and dumped them within the Libyan and Algerian deserts with no meals and water, the place at the very least 27 died, resulting in accusations the EU was outsourcing a violent border administration technique.

The expulsions in Tunisia continued with such frequency that they grew to become unofficial coverage, rights teams stated.

Tunisian authorities are additionally now dealing with mounting claims of assaults and sexual violence in opposition to migrants, who’re nonetheless being expelled into barren desert areas, in response to a latest investigation by The Guardian.

“We’ve had so many circumstances of ladies being raped within the desert. They take them from right here and assault them,” native activist Yasmine, who opened a healthcare affiliation that helps migrants within the coastal city of Sfax, advised the newspaper.

Tunisian authorities denied the allegations reported by the newspaper, claiming their safety personnel “function with “professionalism” and respect “worldwide ideas and requirements”.

‘Chilling message’

The abuse allegations are the most recent to plague the federal government of President Kais Saied, who’s up for re-election in October.

Since dissolving parliament and overseeing the re-writing of the constitution in 2022, Saied has restricted political and media freedoms. Dozens of journalists, political opponents and activists have been arrested, together with these advocating for migrants, in what rights teams have decried as a stifling crackdown.

“The clampdown on migration-related work similtaneously the rising arrest of presidency critics and journalists sends a chilling message that anybody who doesn’t fall in line might find yourself within the authorities’ crosshairs,” stated Lama Fakih, Center East and North Africa director at Human Rights Watch.

Final week, Tunisia’s electoral fee, whose members have been chosen by Saied, rejected a court order to reinstate two presidential candidates it had barred from contesting the election. That leaves him to compete in opposition to solely two lesser-known candidates, in a race he’s extensively anticipated to win.

“By disregarding the executive court docket’s rulings, the electoral fee is as soon as once more tipping the scales in favour of Saied and making a mockery of this election,” Bassam Khawaja, Center East and North Africa deputy director at Human Rights Watch, had advised Al Jazeera.

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