Hundreds of Black African refugees and migrants left along Tunisia's desolate borders are missing, dead or suffering. Turkey says it will approve Sweden's NATO bid. And refugees in Jenin are trying to get back to normal after Israel's offensive. Here's the Middle East this week: Tunisia expels Black refugees They were so thirsty, they drank seawater. Left without water, food, or protection from the sun, the Black African refugees and migrants expelled from the city of Sfax to desolate areas on Tunisia's borders was the culmination of what many say has been months of racist abuse. Hundreds were rounded up, driven for more than three hours and left at Ben Guerdane, a militarised Tunisia-Libya border zone. Others were expelled to the Algerian border. Some people were taken back from Libya's border to towns in southern Tunisia, under heavy guard, but many others are still trapped in the harsh desert, reeling from reportedly being beaten and abused by Tunisian police. Meanwhile, contact has been lost with the group left near Algeria and the bodies of two men have been recovered from where they were last seen. Watch: Hear from migrants expelled from Tunisia and left at the border |
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