Tunisia and Germany have agreed to speed up the repatriation of rejected asylum- seekers from the North African country, German Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere said yesterday.
He said the two countries were also seeking to boost security cooperation, namely with Berlin training border guards to secure the frontier with its conflict-hit neighbour Libya.
After taking in more than 1mn asylum-seekers last year, Germany is trying to reduce arrivals, including with a law to declare Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia as safe countries of origin.
Speaking in Tunis at the end of a tour of the three countries, De Maiziere said a first group of 20 Tunisians who failed to secure asylum in Germany would soon be repatriated.
This “pilot project” would test the ground to ensure the “efficiency” of the system and pave the way for further returns, he said.
“These repatriations would not concern the tens of thousands of Tunisians who live legally in Germany (where) they run small businesses, live normally and pay their taxes,” he said.
Human rights groups oppose the designation of the three Maghreb countries as “safe” under a law awaiting upper house approval, pointing to discrimination against homosexuals and curbs on free speech and assembly.
De Maiziere rejected the criticism, saying that although designated safe countries are assumed to not systematically persecute their citizens, individual requests for protection would still be considered.
Chancellor Angela Merkel has come under intense pressure to limit the influx of migrants, mainly from war-torn Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan, with the southern state of Bavaria demanding permanent controls on its border with Austria.
In Tunis, De Maiziere also spoke of bolstering security ties with Tunisia, especially along the border with Libya, where the Islamic State group has gained a foothold, and to battle terrorism.
Last month the German newspaper Bild am Sonntag said Germany was considering sending troops to Tunisia to help train soldiers in the fight against IS.
And on Monday, British Defence Minister Michael Fallon told parliament his country would be sending a training team to Tunisia to help stop people illegally entering from Libya.
IS has claimed responsibility for three bombings last year in Tunisia that killed dozens of people, including 59 foreign tourists. It has been blamed for a series of atrocities in Libya.
Western countries have agreed that military action is needed to dislodge IS in Libya - which lies on Europe’s doorstep - but world powers want a national unity government installed to request help before formally intervening.

Tunisia troops kill four militants
Tunisian troops killed four suspected militants in a counter-terrorism operation overnight, the interior ministry spokesman said yesterday.
There were no security force casualties in the operation in the Ain Jaffel area on the border between the central provinces of Kasserine and Sidi Bouzid, Yasser Messbah told AFP.
The operation, which ended at around 1100 GMT yesterday, also resulted in the seizure of “a Kalashnikov, ammunition, a large quantity of detonators” and a home-made grenade, a ministry statement said.
Kasserine province, which neighbours Algeria, has seen repeated clashes between security forces and Islamist militants.
Tunisia has built a 200km barrier that stretches about half the length of its border with Libya in an attempt to prevent militants from infiltrating.

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