Nearly 400 migrants repatriated from Tunisia, IOM says

A woman with her baby on her back walks in the Tunis suburb of Bhar Lazreg on February 24, 2023. (AFP)
A woman with her baby on her back walks in the Tunis suburb of Bhar Lazreg on February 24, 2023. (AFP)
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Updated 20 January 2024
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Nearly 400 migrants repatriated from Tunisia, IOM says

A woman with her baby on her back walks in the Tunis suburb of Bhar Lazreg on February 24, 2023. (AFP)
  • The number of departures surged in Tunisia following a speech last February by President Kais Saied in which he denounced “hordes of illegal migrants” as a demographic threat to the country

TUNIS: Nearly 400 migrants from sub-Saharan Africa have been repatriated from Tunisia to their home countries in recent days, the International Organization for Migration or IOM said.
The IOM has facilitated “the safe and dignified voluntary return” of 392 people, largely from Burkina Faso, Gambia, Mali, and Senegal, according to a statement from the UN agency.
Upon arrival in their countries, they will receive “tailored reintegration services to rebuild their lives and reintegrate into their communities,” the statement said.
In 2023, the agency assisted 2,557 migrants who wanted to return from Tunisia to their country of origin, a 45 percent jump since 2022.
It added that the repatriation took place in collaboration with the Tunisian government and local authorities, including those in Sfax, the epicenter of migration from Tunisia to Europe, and Medenine and Tataouine, two disadvantaged areas in southern Tunisia.
Tunisia intercepted nearly 70,000 people during irregular migration attempts over the first 11 months of 2023, more than double the number in 2022, according to statistics shared by the National Guard.
Of that figure, 77.5 percent were foreigners, mostly from sub-Saharan Africa, and the remainder were Tunisians, compared to 59 percent foreigners in 2022.
The number of departures surged in Tunisia following a speech last February by President Kais Saied in which he denounced “hordes of illegal migrants” as a demographic threat to the country.
Migrants and refugees in Tunisia are facing “daily institutional violence,” including “arbitrary” arrests, “forced displacements” and “expulsions toward the borders” with Libya and Algeria, according to a report by the World Organization Against Torture published in mid-December.
The report said authorities have engaged in numerous human rights violations, noting that the country is under “continued pressure from Europe to reduce irregular migration in the Mediterranean.”

 


Jordanian field hospital treats 32,000 Palestinians since June

Jordanian field hospital treats 32,000 Palestinians since June
Updated 5 sec ago
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Jordanian field hospital treats 32,000 Palestinians since June

Jordanian field hospital treats 32,000 Palestinians since June
  • Staff have carried out 1,067 operations

RIYADH: The Jordanian field hospital Nablus 3 has treated 32,000 patients in the northern West Bank since its deployment in June, state news agency Petra reported on Friday.
Staff have carried out 1,067 operations. A Spigelian hernia operation was conducted by a specialized team on Wednesday for a patient with severe abdominal pain.
Nablus residents have expressed gratitude for Jordan’s ongoing assistance to the Palestinian people.


Iran’s new foreign minister calls for EU dialogue

Iran’s new foreign minister calls for EU dialogue
Updated 37 sec ago
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Iran’s new foreign minister calls for EU dialogue

Iran’s new foreign minister calls for EU dialogue
  • Relations between the EU and Iran have deteriorated in recent years
  • The bloc accuses Tehran of failing to rein in its nuclear activity, providing support to Palestinian militant group Hamas

TEHRAN: Iran’s new foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, has called for dialogue with the European Union to resolve bilateral issues, following a phone call with the bloc’s top diplomat.
“The Islamic Republic of Iran welcomes the development of relations with the European Union in an environment based on mutual respect,” Araghchi said in a statement issued late Thursday.
Relations between the EU and Iran have deteriorated in recent years.
The bloc accuses Tehran of failing to rein in its nuclear activity, providing support to Palestinian militant group Hamas, backing Russia’s war in Ukraine, and committing human rights violations.
The development of relations “requires dialogue to resolve issues between the two parties and the correction of the misguided policies of European countries,” Araghchi added.
For his part, EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said on social media platform X that he had discussed “prospects for renewed engagement on all files of mutual interest” with his Iranian counterpart.
The discussion included the “need for de-escalation and restraint” as well as “halting military cooperation” with Russia against Ukraine and nuclear non-proliferation.
Borrell said such “critical dialogue” was “essential to defuse regional tensions.”
Iran and its Lebanese ally Hezbollah threatened reprisals against Israel following the killing of Hamas political leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran and a top Hezbollah commander in Beirut late last month.
Araghchi, who took up his post on Wednesday, is known for his openness to the West.
He served as chief nuclear negotiator and played a key role in securing a 2015 agreement for Iran to curb its nuclear activity in return for an easing of sanctions.
That deal was torpedoed in 2018 by then US president Donald Trump. Efforts to revive it since 2022 have so far failed.


Proliferating evacuation orders sow chaos, confusion in Gaza

Proliferating evacuation orders sow chaos, confusion in Gaza
Updated 23 August 2024
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Proliferating evacuation orders sow chaos, confusion in Gaza

Proliferating evacuation orders sow chaos, confusion in Gaza
  • Israeli military sent out 11 evacuation orders via flyers dropped from planes, text messages or social media over the first three weeks of August
  • They called on 250,000 Gazans, almost all of whom had been displaced at least once already, to leave their place of shelter

GAZA STRIP, Palaestinian Territories: The Israeli military has issued so many evacuation orders in 10 months of war that many Gaza civilians no longer heed them, despairing of finding space or safety in the shrinking “humanitarian” zones.
Over the first three weeks of August, the Israeli army sent out 11 evacuation orders via flyers dropped from planes, text messages or social media.
They called on 250,000 Gazans, almost all of whom had been displaced at least once already, to leave their place of shelter.
“The Israeli army will operate with force against terrorist organizations in this area. For your safety, we urge you to evacuate immediately,” read one such order sent out Thursday in the southern province of Khan Yunis.
“Every time we arrive somewhere, we get a new evacuation order two days later. This is no way to live,” Haitham Abdelaal told AFP.
Amneh Abu Daqqa, 45, said she saw no point in moving again, so few were the options for safe haven.
“To go where?” asked the displaced mother of five.
“I live on the street, literally. I don’t have 500 shekels ($133) to rent a donkey-pulled cart. And I don’t even know where I’d go,” she said.
“There is nowhere safe, there are air strikes everywhere.”
The proliferation of Israeli evacuation orders also severely complicates relief distribution by United Nations agencies in a blockaded territory where aid trickles in via Israeli-held entry points.
Wednesday’s evacuation order included “80 makeshift sites” but also offices and warehouses used by aid agencies, the UN humanitarian affairs office (OCHA) said.
The orders also affected “three water wells... which serve tens of thousands of people,” OCHA added.
Sometimes, the evacuation orders close roads, including the main Salah Al-Din highway that runs the length of Gaza from north to south.
When portions of it are included in evacuation orders, transport becomes a headache.
Trucks must use the coast road that runs parallel to Salah Al-Din, currently lined with makeshift camps that make movement “extremely slow and at times impossible,” OCHA said.
Nerman Al-Bashniti, who lives in one such camp, told AFP: “When the Israeli army took the street that we were on, we ran to the sea, left our tent and all our belongings inside.
“Where will we go now? We can only throw ourselves into the sea and let the fish eat us.”
In the early days of the war, the Israeli army touted its plans for the displaced.
After it ordered the evacuation of the north in the first week of the war, it published a map of Gaza broken down into several hundred numbered blocks, and declared the southern area of Al-Mawasi a “humanitarian zone.”
To let Palestinians know precisely which areas will be targeted by military operations, its evacuation orders feature the numbered blocks varying in size depending on building density.
But the many blocks have made the orders confusing and sometimes even contradictory, such as on occasions when blocks listed for evacuation were not featured as to be evacuated on the accompanying maps.
From 1,200 inhabitants per square kilometer before the war, the Al-Mawasi “humanitarian zone” now houses “between 30,000 and 34,000 people per square kilometer” and its protected area shrank from 50 square kilometers to 41, the UN calculated.
Most of Gaza is one extended built-up area, but Al-Mawasi was the location of most of the territory’s Jewish settlements before Israel demolished them when it pulled out in 2005 leaving farmland fringed by the beach.
Now the area is a vast tent-city with more families desperately looking for space to pitch a tent with each new evacuation order.


Gaza Strip faces uphill battle against polio

Gaza Strip faces uphill battle against polio
Updated 22 August 2024
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Gaza Strip faces uphill battle against polio

Gaza Strip faces uphill battle against polio

GAZA STRIP: The Gaza Strip’s first recorded polio case in 25 years has health workers and aid agencies grappling with the steep obstacles to conducting mass vaccination in the war-torn Palestinian territory.

Unrelenting airstrikes by Israel more than 10 months into its war against Gaza rulers Hamas, restrictions of aid entering the besieged territory, and hot summer temperatures all threaten the viability of a life-saving inoculation drive.

Still, equipment to support the extensive campaign — which UN agencies say could start on Aug. 31 — has already arrived in the region.

The Palestinian Health Ministry in the occupied West Bank said last week that tests in Jordan had confirmed polio in an unvaccinated 10-month-old baby from central Gaza.

According to the UN, Gaza had not registered a case for 25 years, although type 2 poliovirus was detected in samples collected from the territory’s wastewater in June.

Poliovirus is highly infectious and most often spread through sewage and contaminated water — an increasingly common problem in Gaza.

The disease mainly affects children under the age of five. 

It can cause deformities and paralysis and is potentially fatal.

UN bodies, the World Health Organization, and children’s agency UNICEF say they have detailed plans to vaccinate 640,000 children across Gaza.

But a significant challenge remains Israel’s devastating military campaign. 

“It’s extremely difficult to undertake a vaccination campaign of this scale and volume under a sky full of airstrikes,” said Juliette Touma, director of communications for the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA.

Under the UN plan, 2,700 health workers in 708 teams would take part, with the WHO overseeing the effort, said Richard Peeperkorn, the agency’s representative in the Palestinian territories.

UNICEF would ensure the cold supply chain as vaccines are brought into and distributed across Gaza, spokesman Jonathan Crickx said.

Cold chain components, including refrigerators, arrived Wednesday at Israel’s main international airport.


Demolition of historic Alexandria site sparks public controversy

Demolition of historic Alexandria site sparks public controversy
Updated 22 August 2024
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Demolition of historic Alexandria site sparks public controversy

Demolition of historic Alexandria site sparks public controversy
  • Residents of the Egyptian city post messages on Facebook confirming part of Dekheila Fort, a site dating back as far as 1250 A.D., has been destroyed
  • Heritage enthusiast Ziad Morsi says: ‘Unfortunately, what was demolished is the oldest registered Mamluk-era monument in Alexandria’

CAIRO: The recent demolition of parts of Dekheila Fort, a historic site near Alexandria that dates back to 1250 A.D., has sparked widespread controversy and criticism.

Officials from the Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities declined to respond to a request for comment on the destruction at the site but residents and heritage campaigners posted messages on Facebook that seemed to confirm it happened.

In one such post, local resident and heritage enthusiast Ziad Morsi said Dekheila Fort consisted of two structures and two cannons. One of the structures, known as the basin, which was built during the Mamluk period that ran from 1250 to 1517, has been demolished, he confirmed.

The second structure, which remains standing, is a tower that is a remnant of fortifications built by Ghalis Pasha during the reign of Muhammad Ali Pasha (1805-1848) and reinforced with Armstrong cannons during the rule of Khedive Ismail Pasha (1863-1879), he said.

Morsi wrote on Tuesday: “We were surprised yesterday by images from the Dekheila area showing a bulldozer demolishing the dry dock area and Dekheila Fort. I want to highlight a few points, the first of which is that the Dekheila beach area contains several historical sites, some of which are officially listed as Islamic antiquities in Egypt, while others remain unregistered.

“Unfortunately, what was demolished is the oldest registered Mamluk-era monument in Alexandria. Some friends had plans to conduct detailed studies and propose a restoration project for it.”

Abdel Rahim Rehan, head of the Campaign to Defend Egyptian Civilization, an organization established a few years ago to encourage preservation of the nation’s heritage, said: “The basin adjacent to Dekheila fort, which is reportedly demolished, is registered with the Ministry of Antiquities.

“It is located directly on the shore of Lake Dekheila and was used during the Mamluk era for city defense. However, it was repurposed during the reign of Muhammad Ali Pasha as a lighthouse to guide ships entering Alexandria’s ports.”

He added that the basin had suffered damage from winter coastal storms, marine debris and sewage infrastructure.

The Alexandria Antiquities Directorate has not commented on the demolition at the site. However, on Wednesday it said two historical cannons had been moved as part of a transfer of artifacts from the Dekheila fortifications to the nearby Kom El-Nadoura archaeological area.

An official from the directorate said: “Each cannon weighs 9 tonnes and they were moved following approval from the Permanent Committee for Islamic and Coptic Antiquities to ensure better preservation at the new site, as they are among the most important registered artifacts.

“The transfer was conducted under special procedures to preserve the cannons, with police security provided during the move. The cannons are now part of a collection in Kom El-Nadoura in Alexandria, where a display area for the cannons is being prepared. It will be completed once the entire contents of the fort are transferred.”

The Department of Archaeological Engineering and Environment at Cairo University’s Faculty of Engineering previously carried out studies at the site in preparation for a restoration project but no work was carried out.