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Sub-Saharan Africans desperate to leave Tunisia after attacks

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Sub-Saharan Africans desperate to leave Tunisia after attacks

Tunis, Tunisia – Nikki Yanga left the Democratic Republic of the Congo for Tunisia 5 months in the past, dreaming of a greater life.

There was the potential to work in Tunisia itself, or to make use of the North African nation as a springboard to journey to Europe, as many migrants and refugees have accomplished prior to now.

These goals have now been turned the other way up. As a substitute, her solely hope is that she will be able to make it again dwelling, away from a rising tide of racism in Tunisia that has emerged following anti-migrant statements issued by President Kais Saied.

Yanga spoke to Al Jazeera from outdoors the Congolese embassy as she fearfully waited to listen to if she had been accepted for voluntary repatriation, a return to a rustic she had left after the loss of life of her father.

“There was nothing left for me within the DR Congo; I heard that Tunisia was an exquisite and tolerant nation, so I made a decision to journey,” Yanga defined.

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With some mates, Yanga says that she had journeyed overland, passing via a number of international locations, earlier than crossing the border from Algeria to Tunisia with a gaggle of sub-Saharan African migrants and refugees, aided by a individuals smuggler, three months in the past.

“There have been roughly 20 of us from the DR Congo, Guinea and the Ivory Coast, and I paid 250 euros ($266) to the smuggler,” Yanga stated.

Nevertheless, her plans quickly fell aside, as she was unable to discover a job, and, with out cash, unable to purchase sufficient meals or lease a house.

“I spent every day on the lookout for work or for somebody to assist me discover a place to remain … [but] I used to be continually harassed by police,” Yanga stated.

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Presidential incitement

Yanga stated her life in Tunisia has progressively worsened, notably following President Saied’s February 21 feedback on the nation’s Nationwide Safety Council, wherein he stated migration from sub-Saharan Africa aimed to vary Tunisia’s nationwide id.

“The undeclared purpose of the successive waves of unlawful immigration is to contemplate Tunisia a purely African nation that has no affiliation to the Arab and Islamic nations,” Saied, who has taken an more and more authoritarian flip since suspending parliament and dissolving the federal government in July 2021, stated.

He added that undocumented immigration to Tunisia had led to violence and crime, and wanted to finish rapidly.

Official figures present that there are roughly 21,000 undocumented Africans in Tunisia.

These feedback, and Saied’s rhetoric since then, have been denounced by the president’s opponents and the African Union, and have led to what has been described by advocacy teams as a racist backlash in opposition to sub-Saharan Africans residing in Tunisia, in addition to Black Tunisians, notably on social media.

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The far-right Tunisian Nationwide Get together has additionally led a marketing campaign calling for the expulsion of sub-Saharan African immigrants, framing immigration to Tunisia from different components of Africa as being a part of an effort to provoke demographic change within the nation, an concept that has parallels with the European far proper’s “Nice Alternative” conspiracy idea, which posits that immigration from Africa and Asia is geared toward changing white individuals in Europe.

Migrants and refugees have used social media to indicate the implications of a few of that rhetoric.

Movies present bodily assaults on the individuals themselves, in addition to on their houses.

Tunisian safety forces, nevertheless, seem like concentrating on the migrants themselves, slightly than the perpetrators of the assaults.

In accordance with Legal professionals With out Borders, an advocacy group, roughly 800 sub-Saharan Africans have been arrested. Others have been evicted from houses that they had rented, or have misplaced their jobs.

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Yanga herself says that she has since been attacked by two males who took a bag containing her passport.

“The assault passed off a number of days after the Tunisian president spoke,” Yanga stated. “His speech was inciteful in opposition to us, and its outcomes have begun to look.”

With a seamless safety clampdown on unlawful immigration, and, afraid of being imprisoned due to her immigration standing, Yanga says that she has not gone to the police following the assault.

As a substitute, she is hoping that the DR Congo will observe within the footsteps of different African international locations, resembling Guinea and the Ivory Coast, in working to carry her dwelling.

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US military conducts successful airstrikes on Houthi rebel forces in Yemen

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US military conducts successful airstrikes on Houthi rebel forces in Yemen

The U.S. military confirmed it conducted airstrikes in Yemen, saying it targeted a missile storage site and a command-and-control center operated by Iran-backed Houthi rebels.

U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) announced the successful strikes in a release Saturday, saying they were meant to “disrupt and degrade” Houthi operations.

“CENTCOM forces conducted the deliberate strikes to disrupt and degrade Houthi operations, such as attacks against U.S. Navy warships and merchant vessels in the Southern Red Sea, Bab al-Mandeb and Gulf of Aden,” CENTCOM said in a news release.

DISAPPROVAL MOUNTS BOTH AT HOME AND ABROAD AS US AVOIDS DIRECT ACTION AGAINST HOUTHI REBELS

The U.S. military successfully conducted airstrikes in Yemen, saying it targeted a missile storage site and a command-and-control site operated by Iran-backed Houthi rebels. (CENTCOM via X)

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Footage from CENTCOM showed F/A-18’s taking off. The agency said it also used assets from the Navy and the Air Force.

US NAVY SHIPS REPEL ATTACK FROM HOUTHIS IN GULF OF ADEN 

“The strike reflects CENTCOM’s ongoing commitment to protect U.S. and coalition personnel, regional partners and international shipping,” it said.

Houthi rebels

Houthi followers burn the Israeli and American flags on the outskirts of Sana’a, Yemen. (Mohammed Hamoud/Getty Images)

The attacks against shipping are ongoing, and Houthi militants have vowed to continue until Israel ends its campaign in Gaza.

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The terrorist group has targeted more than 100 merchant vessels since the start of the Israel-Hamas war in October 2023.

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Fact check: How deadly was 2024 for journalists?

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Fact check: How deadly was 2024 for journalists?

An estimated 104 journalists lost their lives in 2024, with Palestine the most dangerous territory.

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An estimated 104 journalists were killed worldwide over the past year, according to data shared earlier this month by the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ).

Another report by NGO Reporters Without Borders (RSF) puts the figure at 54, but its methodology means it only includes killings that are considered “directly related” to journalists’ professional activity.

Both organisations say that Palestine is the deadliest place on earth for journalists. More than half (55) of the 104 killings reported by IFJ were Palestinian media professionals in Gaza, while a further six were killed in Lebanon.

At least 138 journalists have been killed in Gaza since the war between Israel and Hamas broke out on 7 October 2023, making the country one of the “most dangerous in the history of modern journalism, behind Iraq, the Philippines and Mexico,” according to the IFJ.

Reporters without Borders has described the number of killings in Gaza as “an unprecedented bloodbath”.

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Israel firmly denies it has intentionally targeted any journalists, but has recognised some that have been killed in its airstrikes on Gaza.

The 104 total killings reported by the IFJ is a slight decrease on the 129 they reported on in 2023, which is considered the bloodiest year for journalists since 1990.

How do other world regions fare?

Asia Pacific is the world’s second most dangerous region for journalists, after the Middle East, according to the IFJ.

It recorded 20 deaths in the region in 2024, of which 70% happened in the southern Asian countries of Pakistan, Bangladesh and India.

The region has seen an “upsurge” in violence, according to the IFJ, with deaths increasing sharply from the 12 recorded in 2023.

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Africa was the third most dangerous region for journalists at eight deaths, five of them in war-torn Sudan.

The number of journalists killed in south, central and north America has dropped sharply over the past two years, from 30 in 2022 to six in 2023, and another six in 2024. Mexico, considered to be one of the deadliest places in the world to do journalism, continues to see “threats, intimidation, kidnappings and murders” against journalists, particularly due to reporting on drug trafficking.

Number of journalists behind bars on the rise

According to IFJ estimates on 10 December, there were 520 journalists in prison across the world, considerably more than in 2023 (427) and 2022 (375).

China, including Hong Kong, accounts for most of journalists behind bars, followed by Israel and Myanmar.

The IFJ says the figures show how “fragile” the independent press is and how “risky and dangerous” the profession of journalism has become.

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Italian state railways plans 1.3 bln euro investment in solar plant

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Italian state railways plans 1.3 bln euro investment in solar plant
Italian state railways Ferrovie dello Stato plans to invest 1.3 billion euros ($1.36 billion) in a photovoltaic plant with an initial 1 gigawatt (GW) capacity that would cover 19% of its energy needs by 2029, the CEO said in a newspaper interview.
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