Tunisia recovers 210 refugee bodies in less than 14 days

Officials say so many refugees and migrants risking perilous sea crossing from Tunisia to Europe have drowned that morgues in key launchpad city of Sfax are full and burial grounds are difficult to find.

Numbers are etched in the soil for graves to bury the bodies of refugees and migrants who drowned at sea and were recovered by the Tunisian coast guard, at the Barkallah cemetery in Sfax, on April 28, 2023. / Photo: AFP
AFP

Numbers are etched in the soil for graves to bury the bodies of refugees and migrants who drowned at sea and were recovered by the Tunisian coast guard, at the Barkallah cemetery in Sfax, on April 28, 2023. / Photo: AFP

Tunisia's coast guard has said it has recovered around 210 bodies of refugees and migrants under two weeks that have washed up on the North African country's central coastline amid an ongoing increase in migration.

Preliminary examinations of the bodies indicated that the refugees were from sub-Saharan Africa, according to the National Guard’s Houssemeddine Jebabli.

The number of bodies recovered was announced on Friday.

Of the 210 dead migrants found over 10 days starting on April 18, about 70 of those were recovered from the beaches of eastern Sfax, the neighbouring Kerkennah islands and Mahdia, according to prosecutor Faouzi Masmoudi, who oversees migration issues.

These three areas are starting points for most attempts to migrate to the Italian coast, including onward to the remote island of Lampedusa, he added.

The increasing number of dead refugees migrants has overwhelmed the Habib Bourguiba hospital morgue in Sfax, the capacity of which is 30 to 40 bodies.

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Difficulties in finding burial places

To ease the pressure on hospitals, local authorities are working to speed up the burial of the victims after carrying out DNA tests and possible identification by relatives, Masmoudi said.

Romdhane Ben Amor, spokesperson for the Tunisian Forum for Economic and Social Rights [FTDES], an non-governmental organisation specialising in migration issues, said that local authorities had last year committed themselves to setting up a special cemetery for migrants, "on the grounds that they are not Muslims."

But Amor said that this is still not ready, leading to the difficulties in finding burial places.

Following a visit earlier this week by European Commissioner for Home Affairs Ylva Johansson, the Tunisian Foreign Ministry said in a statement on Thursday that Tunisia and the European Union agreed to promote the voluntary return of sub-Saharan refugees and migrants to their countries of origin.

During her stay, the EU official met with Tunisian Foreign Minister Nabil Ammar, Interior Minister Kamel Feki and Social Affairs Minister Malek Ezzahi.

Refugee migration to Europe has been on an upward climb, peaking in 2022 to 189,620, according to the International Organization for Migration.

That's the most since 2016, when close to 400,000 left their homelands, and one year after more than 1 million people, mostly Syrians fleeing war, sought refuge in 2015.

For many sub-Saharan Africans, who don't need a visa to travel to Tunisia, the North African country serves as a stepping stone to Europe, while others come from Libya, which shares a border with Tunisia.

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Route 6