Saied’s Tunisia: Where black lives don’t matter
When a foolhardy presidential power grab goes wrong and your indebted nation nears default, do not drown it in racism and hatred against black people. President Kais Saied’s hate speech against black migrants is a desperate attempt to distract from poor governance amidst economic stagnation, soaring inflation, and an essential .
Saied’s February tirade labeled migrants from sub-Saharan Africa as Tunisia’s source of violence and crime, and of playing part in “a criminal plan to change the composition of the demographic landscape in Tunisia” to just another African country, rather than an Arab and Islamic nation. Saied’s hate speech has fuelled conspiracy theories that have turned into racially motivated attacks and has left unanswered the political and economic upheavals of Tunisia.
Saied must answer for his reckless rhetoric and ensure that Tunisia protects the rights and dignity of migrants.
''Now is the time to meet the obligations under international law and protect the rights of migrants, refugees, and asylum seekers from marginalisation and deprivation.''
In just one week, Saied’s xenophobic hate speech resulted in politically motivated and racially inspired arrests. Today, migrants are terrified to leave their homes or attend classes, and hundreds are fleeing via flights, despite legal status. Black migrants are forcibly evicted, jobs terminated, banned from , houses burned, and . Black Tunisians are even reporting the rise in solely based on skin colour.
If that was not enough, Saied took it further and threatened the judiciary in their attempts to uphold rule of law, : “Anyone who dares to acquit them is their accomplice.”
Civil society groups have taken hundreds of calls for shelter, food, and necessities, although the number of those in need is unknown. Some calls have represented a request for aid for more than one , whereas others simply do not know who to call. To escape hell on earth, sub-Saharan countries, including Mali, Ivory Coast, and Gabon, are encouraging their respective nationals to register for .
The world is responding to Saied’s baseless accusations. More than 40 civil society organisations and hundreds of have gathered in Tunis to denounce Saied’s hate speech.
Unsurprisingly, the hate-mongering was supported from the far-right and xenophobes like . However, the rest of the world took a step back from, deeply disturbed by the climate of fear and reports of violence.
The IMF is worried and the World Bank paused its work with Tunisia that Saied triggered “racially motivated harassment and even violence.” The African Union postponed a conference meant to be hosted in Tunisia, strongly condemning Saied’s speech and reminding of Tunisia’s to respect the dignity of migrants, as member within the 55-member regional body.
Despite an overwhelmingly negative global response, and the Foreign Ministry clamours together irrationally accusing critics, including the United States, , the AU, and of misinterpreting the racialised hate speech. Without shame, the even attempted to “reassure” – if you can call it that – foreign ambassadors that migrants with legal status “have nothing to worry about."
Let us be clear, hate speech does not answer the political paralysis and economic crisis being endured by Tunisians, nor do the sub-Saharan African migrants that make up less than one percent of the . This hate-mongering is a vilified attempt to scapegoat for Saied’s failures as head of state. Tunisia’s economy remains poorly managed and he has done little to stop ongoing corruption. Instead, he has fuelled a migrant crisis and racially motivated violence.
Rather than policing streets to arrest people for being black, president Saied must call off the arbitrary arrests and crackdown on the racially motivated attacks. He must also bear responsibility for his unfounded statements and coordinate local authorities with international humanitarian organisations to facilitate the return of migrants that wish to return to their respective country of origin.
Now is the time to meet the obligations under international law and protect the rights of migrants, refugees, and asylum seekers from marginalisation and deprivation.
Tunisia must launch an for undocumented migrants for regulation and management. And while the Foreign Ministry currently claims that Tunisia is among the world’s countries to live in, migrants, even with legal status, continue to endure insufferable and dangerous work conditions. New policies that focus on the nexus between migration and rural development are critical to pulling Tunisia out of its highly uncertain and outlook.
Fostering integration and productivity of migrants in Tunisia, in addition to for labor mobility and rural-to-urban development will safeguard a more promising and prosperous future for Tunisia.
President Saied, your incumbent takeover failed. Do not root Tunisia into another crisis of violence and division of your own doing. The world and Tunisians will not stand for it. As the of the protestors goes: “Solidarity with migrants of the whole world.”
Cierra Powellis aMaster’s Degree student atPenn State's School of International Affairs. She is graduating in May, then will pursue work in the diplomatic sphere. She is currently studying Tunisia as part of a course she is attending at the university on North Africa after the Arab Spring.
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