Tunis, Tunisia
Reuters
The Tunisian coast guard recovered 901 bodies of drowned migrants off its coast from 1st January to 20th July this year, the country’s interior minister, Kamel Feki, said on Wednesday, marking an unprecedented number of victims off the country’s coasts.
A view shows boats that were used by migrants and seized by Tunisian coast guards, in Sfax, Tunisia, on 26th April, 2023. PICTURE: Reuters/Jihed Abidellaoui/File photo
The North Africa country is facing a record wave of migration this year and frequent catastrophes of the sinking of boats of migrants from sub-Saharan Africa heading to Italian coasts.
Tunisia replaced Libya as the region’s main departure point for people fleeing poverty and conflict in Africa and the Middle East in the hope of a better life in Europe.
Feki told parliament that among 901 bodies found were 36 Tunisians and 267 foreigner migrants, while identities of the rest were unknown.
Most of the boats carrying migrants depart from the coast of the southern city of Sfax.
Thousands of undocumented migrants have flocked to the coastal city of Sfax in recent months with the goal of setting off for Europe in boats run by human traffickers, leading to an unprecedented migration crisis for Tunisia.
Some 75,065 boat migrants had reached Italy by 14th July against 31,920 in the same period last year, official data showed. More than half left from Tunisia.
The European Union and Tunisia signed in July a “strategic partnership” deal that includes combating human traffickers and tightening sea borders during a sharp increase in boats leaving the North African nation for Europe.