Tunis – Tunisia said on Wednesday it plans to repatriate a four-year-old girl who reached Italy aboard a boat with other irregular migrants, but without her family.
The state “is taking care of the girl’s interests and completing the necessary measures to ensure her return to the country as soon as possible,” the Tunisian family ministry said.
A Tunisian delegation is scheduled to meet on Friday with the Italian judge overseeing the case in Sicily.
The girl’s parents had planned to leave as a family along with her brother, aged seven, on a makeshift boat from the coastal town of Sayada and head towards the Italian island of Lampedusa.
Tunisia said Wednesday it plans to repatriate a four-year-old girl who reached Italy aboard a boat with other irregular migrants but without her family.https://t.co/jQZ8m6Wrwn
— CGTN Africa (@cgtnafrica) October 26, 2022
But according to the FTDES rights group, which closely tracks clandestine migration from Tunisia, the father had “handed his daughter over to the smuggler on the boat” before retracing his steps from the embarcation point “to help his wife and son who were far behind”.
“In the meantime, the boat left for Lampedusa,” it said.
Her parents, street vendors in coastal Tunisia, were detained last week before being released, a court official in the city of Monastir told AFP.
They had paid nearly 24 000 dinars (about $7 400) to attempt the crossing, the FTDES group and the interior ministry said.
The owner of the boat and other migrants have also been detained, the court official said.
ALSO READ | Divorce service sparks row in Tunisia
A deep economic crisis is pushing growing numbers of Tunisians to attempt to reach Europe, particularly Lampedusa which is less than 130 kilometres (80 miles) off the coast.
Authorities in the North African country of 12 million, under pressure from Europe to stem the flow, are struggling to intercept those who leave.
According to FTDES, some 2 600 Tunisian minors, more than two-thirds of them unaccompanied, reached Italy between January and August, out of a total of around 13 000 Tunisian migrants.
Follow African Insider on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram
Source: AFP
Picture: Pixabay
For more African news, visit Africaninsider.com