Tunisian delegation to attend 22nd COMESA Summit of Heads of State and Government June 8 in Lusaka

(TAP) - Tunisia will take part in the 22nd COMESA Summit of Heads of State and Government to be held on June 8, 2023, in Lusaka, Zambia. The Summit will be an opportunity for COMESA Member States to discuss economic integration, value addition and peace and security, among others. It will be preceded by the Meeting of COMESA Ministers of Foreign Affairs on June 6, 2023 and the COMESA Business Forum on June 7, 2023, at the Mulungushi International Conference Centre, Kenneth Kaunda Wing in Lusaka. Minister of Foreign Affairs, Migration and Tunisians Abroad Nabil Ammar will lead the Tunisian delegation which will take part in these meetings, reads a statement of the Foreign Affairs Ministry on Tuesday. Tunisia signed in July 2018 the accession treaty to this regional grouping which brings together 21 African countries, with the aim of contributing to boosting the South-South partnership, in particular with the countries of the East and the South of the Continent.

Source: Agence Tunis Afrique Presse

Bouden sees in Italian PM at Tunis-Carthage airport

(TAP) - Prime Minister Najla bouden on Tuesday morning saw in Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni at Tunis-Carthage airport, according to a Prime Ministry press release. Meloni is paying a friendly and working visit to Tunisia at the invitation of President of the Republic Kais Saied. Prime Minister since October 2022, Georgia Meloni is President of the far-right Fratelli d'Italia party.

Source: Agence Tunis Afrique Presse

President Saïed meets Georgia Meloni: Migration and negotiations with IMF on agenda

(TAP) - Migration, negotiations with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and Tunisia's foreign debt were the key issues on the agenda at a meeting held on Tuesday at Carthage Palace between President of the Republic, Kais Saïed, and Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, who is on a friendly working visit to Tunisia at the invitation of the Head of State. President Saïed took advantage of the meeting to review the strong and solid relations of friendship and cooperation between Tunisia and Italy, recalling a number of key dates which bear witness to the rapprochement between the two peoples, as quoted in a press release issued by the Presidency of the Republic on Tuesday. The meeting also provided an opportunity to discuss several important issues, including in particular the question of irregular migration, which in essence constitutes "inhuman migration", according to the same press release. On this subject, the Head of State told Meloni that Tunisia "bears an enormous burden and faces many challenges, in the sense that it is no longer just a transit point for migrants but also and above all a destination for many of them who settle there illegally." The Head of State added that "groups of them have set up illegal public schools and nurseries, thereby violating the country's existing legislation, something we can no longer accept". "It is the State that has the prerogative to legislate, and it is also the State that oversees its implementation, and this legislation applies to everyone without exception", said President Saïed. The Head of State told the Italian official and the delegation accompanying her that this phenomenon, which continues to grow and gain ground day by day, can only be tackled collectively. He also called for a "joint solution within the framework of a Summit to which the countries concerned in the southern Mediterranean, the Sub-Saharan region and the northern Mediterranean will be invited". President Kais Saied noted in this respect that "all roads no longer lead to Rome alone, but also to Tunisia", which in itself constitutes "an abnormal phenomenon both for Tunisia and for the countries to which these immigrants flock". The Head of State also warned against the existence of criminal networks that traffic people and organs, whether in African countries or in countries on the northern shores of the Mediterranean, calling for concerted action to deal with these organisations that prey on migrants lost at sea and in the shifting sands of the deserts before they reach the areas where they want to settle. For President Kais Saied, the solution is no longer a truncated security solution. For him, it is important to get to the heart of the matter by tackling its origins, misery, extreme poverty and deprivation, reaffirming the imperative of working collectively to instil a glimmer of hope in the hearts of migrants so that they no longer leave their homelands, by acting with an effective strategy targeting the economic and social sectors. Turning to the negotiations with the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the Head of State unequivocally reiterated his "categorical rejection of all forms of diktats", pointing out that those who rush to offer "ready-made" formulas are very much like a doctor who prescribes a drug before he can identify the nature of the pathology. An approach that is at best false, at worst deleterious, and that will bring neither happiness nor a cure to the patient. On the contrary," the Head of State continued, "it will complicate matters and will inevitably be a source of social instability in Tunisia, and could even have enormous repercussions that will spare no one in the region. The President of the Republic also discussed with the Italian Prime Ministerthe issue of cancelling Tunisia's foreign debt, which is undermining the State's budget balance, and ways of activating the mechanism for converting debt into development projects, pointing out that large sums of these debts have been embezzled, according to the testimonies of a number of international institutions.

Source: Agence Tunis Afrique Presse

“State officials do not respect the law,” says Nejib Chebbi

(TAP) - State officials do not respect the law and that the situation in the country is in danger of deteriorating further, said president of the National Salvation Front, Ahmed Nejib Chebbi,. Speaking at a press conference on Tuesday to shed light on the detention of Ennahdha leader Sahbi Atig, he added that while the country is facing a tough economic and social crisis, state officials are being sacked on the basis of their political and ideological affiliations. Regarding the detention of Sahbi Atig, the head of the Front pointed out that the case was brought on the basis of a defamatory denunciation in 2016. He regretted that the case against Sahbi Atig was damaging his political career. For his part, Samir Dilou, a member of Sahbi Atig's defence committee, pointed out that his client's case file is empty, which explains his decision to go on hunger strike. Dilou and Sahbi Atig's wife blamed the examining magistrate for the deterioration of his health, claiming that he had been hospitalised seven times in less than a month.

Source: Agence Tunis Afrique Presse