Tunisia

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Bankrolling Tunisian Migration Crackdown That is Only Making Asylum Seekers ‘More Determined to Reach Europe’

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 09/05/2024 - 8:43pm in

Piles of refuse and the residual scent of human waste are the only signs that remain of the hundreds of sub-Saharan African migrants who had until recently been crowded by the International Organisation for Migration’s (IOM) offices in Tunis. 

Early on May 3, Tunisian authorities forcibly evacuated the migrants before taking bulldozers to the makeshift encampment they had established by the IOM offices in a nearby park and adjacent alleyway, abutted by ostentatious buildings in the affluent Berges du Lac neighbourhood by Tunis Lake.  

Evacuations continued elsewhere in the capital the following day, with authorities rounding up an estimated 500 to 700 displaced people onto buses, according to Romdhane Ben Amor, spokesman for the Tunisian Forum for Social and Economic Rights (FTDES).

Social media footage shows that some of the migrants and refugees have since been left stranded near the Tunisian border with Algeria — without access to water, food or shelter. Mr Amor estimates that at least 80 were detained.  

“Among them were elderly people, children and pregnant women”, said Adelaide Massimi, project coordinator at the Association for Juridical Studies on Immigration (ASGI), who added that some migrants had also been “taken to inland areas of the country” and “abandoned far from population centres.”

The remains of the evacuated camps in the Les Berges du Lac 1 neighbourhood in Tunis. Photo: Bullah

Tunisian President Kais Saied said in a National Security Council meeting on May 6 that authorities had expelled 400 migrants on the country’s eastern border. The government had not responded to requests for further information on the expelled migrants at the time of publication.

In recent years, thousands of migrants have gathered in Tunisia while they flee government repression, poverty and conflict from sub-Saharan Africa and the Middle East. Many hope to cross the Mediterranean to Europe and nearby Italy, which is accessible by bordering islands just 100 kilometres away.

“Tunisia will not accept to be a place of settlement for these people nor will it accept to be a transit destination,” Saied said on May 6, parroting unsubstantiated claims that malign actors had poured millions in foreign funds to resettle migrants in an ethnic replacement scheme.

The expulsions reflect the precarious limbo thousands of irregular migrants have been forced into by Tunisian authorities. Similar evacuations have been reported near Sfax, Tunisia’s second largest city, while alleged beatings, torture and arbitrary arrests and tensions with locals have compounded the insecurity of many who already complain of sickness and a lack of food and water. 

“We are suffering”, said Bullah, a Sudanese refugee camped with thousands of other migrants near the port city of Sfax. “In the camp, everything is difficult.” 

'I’m hoping to cross this Mediterranean to go to Europe'

Estimates suggest roughly 15,000 migrants live rough in isolated areas near El Amra and Jebeniana. Located some 30 and 50 kilometres north of the port city of Sfax, the towns have become key departure points for Europe-bound sea journeys. 

Many in the migrant camps hope to reach Italy on sea voyages to the island of Lampedusa, which sits some 150 kilometres away. The maritime crossings have proven deadly, with over 2,476 people going missing trying to reach Italy in 2023 alone. 

But to some, the wait in Tunisia has become more perilous than the sea. 

In a makeshift encampment near El Arma, bumps have begun to spread across Bullah’s face and hands. “I am not in good health," the 28-year-old told Byline Times. “There is no money for the medicine”.

"So many people have been missing, so many kids. There are some kids here without parents"

Josephues, a Sierra Leonean refugee

Reports of kidnappings, torture and trafficking at camps have made matters worse. In March, 27 international and national NGOs called out the practices, including the legal aid group Lawyers without Borders, which blamed them on the government’s approach to migration. 

“So many people have been missing, so many kids”, said Josephues, 28, a Sierra Leonean refugee who lives in the camps near El Amra with his wife and eight-year-old son. “There are some kids here without parents”.

Photos of inside the Amra camp, taken by Bullah from Darfur, Sudan

Locals have begun to amplify calls for authorities to remove migrants, with a rally as recently as May 4 in El Amra calling for their “quick” deportation. 

Anti-migrant rhetoric has often been tinged by racism, especially since February 2023, when Saied spoke of a far-right myth about a "a criminal plan to change the demographic structure" of the country.

“Tunisian authorities have implemented an overtly xenophobic policy, echoing a discourse widespread among extreme right-wing supremacists that invokes the idea of ethnic replacement”, said ASGI’s Massimi.

"They come at your place, catch you, stab you, beat you, rape your women"

Josephus

Police repression has increased in tandem, with authorities employing tear gas and burning tents to evacuate the camps while also monitoring them with drones.

Josephus said he fled from Tunis last year after he helped lead protests for migrant rights which led to him becoming a “target” as attacks on the migrant community escalated.

“They come at your place, catch you, stab you, beat you, rape your women”, he said of Tunisian’s who had begun to attack the migrant community. Josephus was arrested before he fled to Zarzis, where migrants gather close to the Libyan border, and then Sfax.

Tensions have only risen in the areas around the port city since. Locals and police often tell migrants to return to the capital or their places of origin, Josephus said. But there is nowhere for them to go. Josephus said locals stand watch to racially profile Sub-Saharan Africans and keep them from taking buses and trains.

“There is no hope here in Tunisia,” Josephus said. “I’m hoping I’m able to cross this Mediterranean to go to Europe.”

'We may be imprisoned at any moment'

Since Saied's February 2023 speech, government repression has become growingly targeted toward advocates for the migrant community, who he claims are conspirators in a plot to trigger ethnic replacement.

In his remarks on May 6, Saied called groups that defend Sub-Saharan migrant communities “traitors” backed by foreign funding. Hours later, local media reported that the government had detained the head of a prominent nongovernmental group and advocate for migrant rights.

“Tunisian authorities have implemented an overtly xenophobic policy, echoing a discourse widespread among extreme right-wing supremacists that invokes the idea of ethnic replacement”

Adelaide Massimi, project coordinator at ASGI

The president has also upped his efforts to silence journalists and political opponents while he pushes impending legislation that stands to imperil NGOs by taking control of civil society organisations.

On May 4, FTDES’s Ben Amor — one of the loudest critics of Saied’s migration policies — told the Byline Times in the organisation's central Tunis offices, that he had already prepared for his arrest. 

Ben Amor from the Tunisian Forum for Social and Economic Rights said he was already preparing for his arrest. Photo: Charles Gorrivan

“The campaign of hatred and racism did not only include migrants, but also all the organisations and associations that support them”, Mr Amor said. “We believe that the next stage will include us, as we may be imprisoned at any moment.”

With an election set for this year, Mr Amor fears that the president is poised to stray further from ideas like human rights and freedom, which sparked the Arab Spring in Tunisia over a decade ago. 

“We have concerns that anti-immigrant rhetoric will escalate and become an electoral card for the candidates”, Ben Amor said. “The next phase will be difficult in Tunisia”.

Crackdowns backed by the EU 

While Saied’s government takes a growingly repressive stance against the displaced community, ASGI’s Massimi said it is only with the EU member states’ "blessing”. 

The EU plans to provide up to €164.5 million to the same Tunisian security forces that Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch accuse of human rights abuses. The bloc has struck similar deals with neighbouring countries, including Mauritania, Egypt, and Libya.

Italy, meanwhile, finalised a series of agreements in April that could amount to over €200 million in loans, credit and cash to Tunisia. The country’s right-wing Prime Minister, Georgia Meloni, visited Tunis last month to bolster alignment between the countries.

“This cooperation indeed has continued despite the raids, illegal detentions and deportations at the borders with Algeria and Libya of foreign nationals, mainly black Africans, who are in Tunisia without any consideration for their legal status," Massimi said.

In an interview with euronews last week, Nicholas Schmitt, lead candidate for the socialists in the EU’s upcoming June election, expressed “reluctance” over the bloc’s plans to send “huge amounts of money” to governments in countries like Tunisia.

“We know the authorities there are really treating refugees very badly”, Schmitt said. 

In El Amra, Josephus said the horror situation in Tunisia has made the passage to Europe his best hope — to find work, offer his son an education, and find a better life.  

“I can’t go back to Sierra Leone for now”, he said. “I won’t be able to stay here in this situation.”

Locked Out of Development: Insiders and Outsiders in Arab Capitalism – review

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 11/03/2024 - 10:18pm in

In Locked Out of Development: Insiders and Outsiders in Arab CapitalismSteffen Hertog critiques mainstream development models in the Middle East, focusing on state intervention and segmented market economies. Although Yusuf Murteza suggests the book under-examines neoliberalism’s prevalence, he finds its analysis on the state’s role in establishing the insider-outsider division in the economy nuanced and valuable.

Locked Out of Development: Insiders and Outsiders in Arab Capitalism. Steffen Hertog. Cambridge University Press. 2022.

Clusters of economic and political theorists have long been discussing how different actors prioritise and frame their understanding of “development”. Post-development and degrowth scholars such as Arturo Escobar, Gustavo Escobar, Wolfgang Sachs, and Jason Hickel announced the death of the mainstream development model as a project. They argued “the project of development” may not be equally beneficial to all societies, since the project carries ethnocentric and universalist dimensions which contribute to the hegemony of the West.

The ‘one size fits all’ idea of neoliberal development, which utilises finance and corporate capital, has gradually been replaced by alternative forms of development

The “one size fits all” idea of neoliberal development, which utilises finance and corporate capital, has gradually been replaced by alternative forms of development. Growing disillusionment with the Anglo-Saxon economic model increased the importance of examining alternative political and economic configurations both inside and beyond developed Western states. Varieties of Capitalism (VoC) theory’s significance can be grasped with its emphasis on existing similarities and differences within the institutions of developed economies. Recently, scholars have taken these insights seriously and benefited from the VoC framework to explain the reasons why political and economic institutions differ across societies. Discourse on the MENA region in terms of democracy and development may suffer from orientalist explanations that directly link religion and culture to the region’s political and economic stagnation. Steffen Hertog’s Locked Out of Development takes issue with what mainstream development scholars consider the political and economic inability of societies in the Middle East to take the Western route and realise neoliberal reforms in order to ensure economic development, productivity and innovation.

Neoliberal narratives suffer from a partial outlook. They trace the failures of development attempts by focusing on policymakers’ level of adherence to marketisation and privatisation.

Hertog’s main arguments throughout the book are threefold. First, neoliberal narratives suffer from a partial outlook. They trace the failures of development attempts by focusing on policymakers’ level of adherence to marketisation and privatisation. They consider ensuring faith in the market mechanisms of production and distribution systems as paramount. However, non-economic, country-specific problems matter. In the case of the Arab world, the deep dividing line of insider-outsider segmentation across societies has more explanatory power than classical narratives of having too much or too little market (81). Second, Hertog believes a comparative perspective situated within a global context carries crucial insights. The selected countries cannot be examined solely by focusing on within-region differences but should be considered within the global development trajectory and compared with developed countries (7). Third, the role of the state has a somewhat ambiguous position in development theory. The concept of a “developmental state” has added a further twist. The characteristics of the state and its symbiotic relationship with labour and the private sector need to be addressed when explaining factors contributing to the persistence of the Arab world’s development problem (8).

The role of the state has a somewhat ambiguous position in development theory

Hertog begins with a detailed examination of academic literature on the political economy of the Middle East, the varieties of capitalism approaches, and his conceptualisation of segmented market economies (SEME). The second chapter adopts a historical perspective and presents the case selected countries’ political and economic transformations after World War II. In the third chapter, Hertog reveals his argumentation of the SEME framework by bringing the state, labour market, business sector and skill composition to light. Detailed analysis of the country case studies follows, accompanied by SEME and future research directions. Lastly, Hertog sums up the reasons for the political and economic inability of the region to take the Western route.

Hertog argues that the VoC approach, with its emphasis on the heterogeneity of existing capitalisms, is useful to explain the unique characteristics of Arab capitalism. Different compositions of firms, the finance sector, networks, and the skill system create ideal-type interactions (those which typify certain characteristics of a phenomena) and lead to diversification within capitalism. The original VoC approach analysed several OECD countries from the developed world. In time, scholars used the explanatory power of VoC to explain the development performances of non-Western countries with specific modifications. Taking insights from recent accounts of VoC literature, Hertog believes the approach fits the Arab world well (8).

In broad terms, the state [in the Arab world] functions as the voice of insiders’ interests to quash any outsider’s attempt to reconfigure access to key resources.

There are two key dynamics in the region. As the second chapter discusses, the state has been a key actor in structuring the playing field between different interests to operate in the region (9). The interventionist and distributive characteristics of the state go hand in hand with the other dynamic, namely the persistence of insider-outsider division in the economy. In broad terms, the state functions as the voice of insiders’ interests to quash any outsider’s attempt to reconfigure access to key resources. Hertog warns that the nuanced structure of the SEME model applies only to the core members of the region, such as Algeria, Egypt, Jordan, Morocco, Tunisia, Syria, and Yemen. The key filter behind this selection of countries is their state-building projects between 1950 and 1970 (4-5).

Strategies of keeping public sector employment high with military jobs, large redistribution policies, food subsidies, and price controls are still prevalent in the region, demonstrating its nationalist and statist legacy.

Hertog finds the roots of his SEME model in Arab nationalism in the post-independence era. The state-building projects of the selected countries fused with nationalist and statist ideologies at the time. Discussion on the region’s long history brings up the question of path-dependence, which is used to describe the limiting power of past decisions over later trajectories. Hertog avoids engaging with these long-term theories, believing them unsuitable for a short book, and the key characteristics of the SEME model originated recently. Nationalisation policies and active intervention in the economy were characteristics of Arab nationalism (15). In state-building projects, Egypt and Syria set the parameters, which were later copied by other states. Strategies of keeping public sector employment high with military jobs, large redistribution policies, food subsidies, and price controls are still prevalent in the region, demonstrating its nationalist and statist legacy (28).

The detailed empirical discussion of the SEME is at the heart of the book. The framework is constituted by the state, labour market, business sector and skill system (9). The distributive character of a state can be located by examining the share of public employment, which remains high from a global perspective. Also, the state extensively regulates labour markets, holding key strongholds to access land and credit (29-30). Hertog argues these factors lead to segmented labour and private sectors, while keeping the skill level low. The presence of the state in the labour market ensures insider-outside division. Since there is little mobility, insiders rarely lose their position. Outsiders cannot reach to the welfare protection schemes by the state. This leads to social exclusion and an unproductive environment (32-48).

Hertog claims state intervention in the private sector creates unique opportunities for crony networks, whereby politically connected companies benefit from credits and licences.

Similar dynamics take place in the business sector, where large firms and clusters of small firms coexist (55). Hertog claims state intervention in the private sector creates unique opportunities for crony networks, whereby politically connected companies benefit from credits and licences. Business actors with outsider status engage in unproductive small-scale activities (58-60). The skill system needs to be thought of in relation to the segmented labour and business sectors. Low skill levels prevent mobility and limit innovation and technological development (69).

Overall, Hertog argues that state intervention in the region establishes the insider-outsider division in the economy. Hertog’s emphasis on bringing the state back into the analysis is beneficial. In the field of comparative politics, the idea of the state as an autonomous actor remained on the margins until the 1980s. The book’s limitations come in two forms. First, it doesn’t mention how global capitalist relations fit into the SEME. Hertog’s defence with the limitation of economic globalisation in the region may not offer a solution, since the dynamics of global capitalist accumulation depend on drawing materials from peripheral countries without contributing to them. Second, Hertog’s claim of neoliberalism’s low presence in the Arab world is dubious. Several scholars (Jason Hickel, Philip Mirowski) argue that states with strong capacity can implement the necessary reforms for deregulation and privatisation. Thus, the presence of neoliberalism and strong state capacity is not mutually exclusive. In the Middle East, we see a unique mixture of neoliberal policy reforms with strong state capacity. Even though Hertog constructs his own case, adapting earlier approaches to VoC and development topics and to explain the MENA region, policymakers, development specialists, and academics will find dry economic analysis alone is not enough. More nuanced analyses that consider the symbiotic interactions between the state, the business sector, and labour force are necessary. Only by doing this is it possible to acknowledge how politics mingle with economics, and to design alternative development programmes in response.

This post gives the views of the author, and not the position of the LSE Review of Books blog, or of the London School of Economics and Political Science.

Image Credit: AlexAnton on Shutterstock.