Like many black Tunisians, 26-year-old Nebras Magnnah has been fearful since waves of racist attacks targeting sub-Saharan African migrants were unleashed after incendiary remarks by President Kais Saied.
Ever since Saied last month ordered “urgent measures” against sub-Saharan migrants over a purported “criminal plot” to change the North African country’s demographic make-up, Magnnah said she was insulted on the street.
Magnnah, a college graduate working as a waitress, said the speech “incited physical and verbal violence” with openly racist actions taken without fear of reprisal.
“Leave, what are you still doing here?”, she said people shouted at her in the street.
Saied’s comments have fuelled attacks, evictions and other retaliation against migrants, international rights groups have said, and West African countries flew home hundreds of their fearful nationals.
Tunisia’s already disadvantaged black minority has also been hit.
Black Tunisians make up some 10 to 15 percent of the country’s 12 million people, many with centuries-old roots in Tunisia from ancestors who arrived during the slave trade.
Saadia Mosbah, who heads the anti-racism campaign group Mnemty, pointed to “five or six attacks on black Tunisians” in recent weeks.
“After the speech, I noticed that black Tunisians were also afraid,” said the 63-year-old former flight attendant, whose campaigning led to an anti-discrimination law being passed in 2018.
As well as online vitriol, Mosbah has also been insulted on the streets including with many telling her to “go home”.
But that did not stop her from showing solidarity with the sub-Saharan migrants.
Mosbah helped provide necessities to the most vulnerable among the more than 21,000 sub-Saharans living in Tunisia, according to the latest official figures, many of whom recently found themselves without work or housing.
Mosbah had previously argued that the Tunisian state was neither “racist nor segregationist”, but after the president’s comments, racism that was “more or less hidden” has rapidly “risen to the surface”.
Saied’s speech was “like a green light from the political power to racists”, she said.
Even more surprising, she found, was that among those who expressed racist comments were the country’s so-called “intellectual elite”.
Anthropologist Stephanie Pouessel said black Tunisians were “collateral damage” from Saied’s speech, which she said targeted undocumented migrants and not skin colour.
But black Tunisians already faced “everyday racism” she added, describing it as “latent but systematic” and noting they faced “difficulty in accessing high-ranking posts”.
Many live in poor areas in the impoverished south.
Most black Tunisians live in “disadvantaged areas and belong to the poorest strata,” wrote researcher Maha Abdelhamid for the EuroMeSCo think tank in 2018.
Following Saied’s “bombshell” comments, many black Tunisians remained silent over the issue of migrants, Pouessel added.
Many feared that speaking up over the rights of migrants would relegate them to a status of foreigners in their country “when they have always struggled to be considered fully Tunisians”, she added.
Former national football captain Radhi Jaidi, who is black, took to Twitter to support migrants.
“I am African not because I was born in Africa but because Africa was born in me,” he wrote.
Jaidi said he was “troubled that individuals took the initiative to do the government’s work against illegal immigration with aggression and outside the law”.
But while he had hoped his message would generate support from other celebrities, apart from tennis star Ons Jabeur, there was little by way of solidarity.
“My post sought to demand respect for the rights” of migrants, he told AFP, deploring the attacks that “marred Tunisia’s image”.
Jaidi continues to promote Tunisia as “a country of freedom and hospitality” but fears lasting damage.
He pointed to the “very political gesture” by players in Senegal’s under-20s football team — when they celebrated a recent victory against Tunisia by showing off their black skin.