Anti black racism in Tunisia + instant Karma

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Bbc.com

Ivory Coast and Guinea to repatriate nationals from Tunisia
1 March 2023
Updated 2 March 2023

outside their embassies in Tunisia
Two West African states are repatriating their citizens from Tunisia following inflammatory remarks by President Kais Saied last week.
Mr Saied said that migration was a "plot" to change the country's demographic profile, blaming "traitors who are working for foreign countries".
Dozens of migrants from sub-Saharan Africa have since been detained.
Ivory Coast and Guinea said they were sending specially charted planes to bring back their nationals.

The most urgent thing is to save lives, to prevent injuries," Ivory Coast's government spokesman Amadou Coulibaly was quoted as saying by AFP news agency.
Tunisia had an estimated 21,000 migrants from sub-Saharan Africa in 2021, according to official figures quoted by a local rights activist who accused Mr Saied of "inciting hatred" and "racial discrimination against African migrants".
Mr Saied has denied being racist.
After his comments, many migrants lost their jobs and housing overnight. Some have reported being physically assaulted.
"These words gave so many people who already had these racist feelings a green light," a student from southern Africa told the BBC's Africa Daily podcast.
She said many sub-Saharan Africans were scared to go outside after others had their "houses set on fire, some beaten up, some harassed, some verbally insulted".
"We don't feel very safe to go to the authorities because we feel like some of them are also in on this... Some of my Tunisian friends say they feel ashamed to be Tunisian at this point because of what is happening."
Hundreds of Ivorians and Guineans have since registered with their countries' embassies to be repatriated.
"The undeclared goal of the successive waves of illegal immigration is to consider Tunisia a purely African country that has no affiliation to the Arab and Islamic nations," Mr Saied said.
The African Union - of which Tunisia is a member - condemned the statement as "shocking", and warned against "racialised hate speech".
Tunisia tennis star Ons Jabeur on Wednesday posted a tweet condemning "discrimination" and calling for "the right of everyone to live with dignity".
About 80% of Tunisians believe that racial discrimination is a problem in their country - the highest figure in the Middle East and North Africa region, according to a survey published by BBC News Arabic last year.
 

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Reuters
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World Bank says pausing future Tunisia work amid reports of racist violence
By Andrea Shalal
and Angus Mcdowall


WASHINGTON, March 6 (Reuters) - The World Bank is pausing future work with Tunisia after statements by the country's president on migrants from African countries triggered racist harassment and violence, World Bank President David Malpass told staff in a note seen by Reuters.

In the note, sent late Sunday, Malpass said the bank was pausing Tunisia's Country Partnership Framework, which mapped out future programs from 2023-2025, and had postponed until further notice a March 21 board meeting to review that new strategic engagement. Current work was continuing, he said.
He said the World Bank viewed the situation as deeply concerning, but viewed steps announced by the Tunisian government to protect and support migrants and refugees as a positive step and would be monitoring their impact

"The safety and inclusion of migrants and minorities is part of our institution’s core values of inclusion, respect, and anti-racism in all shapes and forms," Malpass wrote. "Public commentary that stokes discrimination, aggression, and racist violence is completely unacceptable."
Tunisian President Kais Saied on Sunday denounced racism on Sunday and pointed to possible legal consequences for those attacking migrants 10 days after announcing a crackdown on migration using language the African Union condemned as "racialized hate speech."
According to a Feb. 21 Facebook post, Saied called on security forces and authorities to detain and deport immigrants, and he called migration a conspiracy to change Tunisia's demographics by making it "only an African country" without an affiliation to the Arab and Islamic world.

Police subsequently detained hundreds of migrants, landlords summarily evicted hundreds from their homes and hundreds of others were fired from work, the Tunisian Forum for Economic and Social Rights (FTDES) said.
Reuters spoke to migrants who said they had been attacked in their neighborhoods and saw several other videos of migrants with face injuries saying they had been attacked.
Malpass said Tunisia has "long-standing traditions of openness and tolerance" and the bank would remain fully engaged in the country and working to help create better lives for all people, whether citizens, residents, or immigrants.
He said the bank was working to ensure the safety of all its staff in Tunisia, and especially Africans, including through additional security measures.
The safety measures could affect delivery of World Bank programs, but "staff safety will override program-related concerns," Malpass said.
The World Bank has been a major donor to Tunisia, helping it finance food imports and business development as the government seeks an International Monetary Fund bailout for it state finances.
Saied on Monday issued a video showing him reminding Interior Minister Taoufic Charfeddine of the importance of upholding rights and freedoms. The foreign ministry also held a news conference to again reject accusations of widespread racism in Tunisia.
 

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