The Prague Post - Tunisia plastic collectors spread as economic, migration woes deepen

EUR -
AED 4.288812
AFN 79.953061
ALL 96.716634
AMD 446.411207
ANG 2.089744
AOA 1070.735703
ARS 1495.374496
AUD 1.790588
AWG 2.104107
AZN 1.996383
BAM 1.941082
BBD 2.350279
BDT 142.300985
BGN 1.951616
BHD 0.440115
BIF 3469.532398
BMD 1.167651
BND 1.491465
BOB 8.043013
BRL 6.493894
BSD 1.163974
BTN 100.745087
BWP 15.628495
BYN 3.809315
BYR 22885.962255
BZD 2.338171
CAD 1.603366
CDF 3373.343867
CHF 0.933111
CLF 0.028201
CLP 1106.312296
CNY 8.353366
CNH 8.376799
COP 4747.038985
CRC 588.041103
CUC 1.167651
CUP 30.942755
CVE 109.434263
CZK 24.586182
DJF 207.278286
DKK 7.463556
DOP 70.624481
DZD 151.723397
EGP 56.952067
ERN 17.514767
ETB 161.987807
FJD 2.629315
FKP 0.864042
GBP 0.870034
GEL 3.164583
GGP 0.864042
GHS 12.163663
GIP 0.864042
GMD 84.071204
GNF 10101.318944
GTQ 8.934179
GYD 243.533377
HKD 9.165624
HNL 30.479882
HRK 7.533657
HTG 152.749144
HUF 397.371522
IDR 19089.111058
ILS 3.917691
IMP 0.864042
INR 101.098157
IQD 1524.837722
IRR 49172.70552
ISK 142.184823
JEP 0.864042
JMD 185.672117
JOD 0.827871
JPY 173.135219
KES 150.861806
KGS 101.947663
KHR 4662.565636
KMF 488.653626
KPW 1050.886162
KRW 1617.9149
KWD 0.356461
KYD 0.970045
KZT 634.290412
LAK 25092.731147
LBP 104295.367
LKR 351.206928
LRD 233.380363
LSL 20.658951
LTL 3.44777
LVL 0.7063
LYD 6.283356
MAD 10.467429
MDL 19.578543
MGA 5141.017575
MKD 61.212752
MMK 2451.57389
MNT 4189.242793
MOP 9.411238
MRU 46.455743
MUR 52.987885
MVR 17.983654
MWK 2018.395259
MXN 21.747806
MYR 4.939747
MZN 74.682924
NAD 20.658951
NGN 1782.746059
NIO 42.834468
NOK 11.903929
NPR 161.191743
NZD 1.954539
OMR 0.448915
PAB 1.163974
PEN 4.122739
PGK 4.824377
PHP 66.807222
PKR 329.851657
PLN 4.258184
PYG 8718.887914
QAR 4.242991
RON 5.069358
RSD 117.148576
RUB 93.441688
RWF 1682.54191
SAR 4.379998
SBD 9.674101
SCR 16.495777
SDG 701.171656
SEK 11.150105
SGD 1.499095
SHP 0.91759
SLE 26.79755
SLL 24485.065094
SOS 665.255614
SRD 42.810174
STD 24168.021026
STN 24.315417
SVC 10.184773
SYP 15181.568523
SZL 20.651408
THB 37.862841
TJS 11.116309
TMT 4.098455
TND 3.398204
TOP 2.734752
TRY 47.364671
TTD 7.914984
TWD 34.551981
TZS 2995.024848
UAH 48.670252
UGX 4173.355
USD 1.167651
UYU 46.626053
UZS 14728.320619
VES 140.437367
VND 30577.86411
VUV 138.480579
WST 3.198179
XAF 651.020553
XAG 0.030583
XAU 0.00035
XCD 3.155636
XCG 2.097793
XDR 0.809661
XOF 651.020553
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.345314
ZAR 20.852113
ZMK 10510.262603
ZMW 27.150131
ZWL 375.983189
  • RBGPF

    -1.1200

    73.88

    -1.52%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0400

    13.2

    -0.3%

  • NGG

    -0.0800

    72.15

    -0.11%

  • BP

    0.0700

    32.2

    +0.22%

  • CMSC

    0.0550

    22.485

    +0.24%

  • GSK

    -0.2600

    37.97

    -0.68%

  • SCS

    0.0700

    10.58

    +0.66%

  • RIO

    -0.7300

    63.1

    -1.16%

  • RELX

    -0.9800

    52.73

    -1.86%

  • BTI

    -0.3700

    52.25

    -0.71%

  • AZN

    -1.0200

    72.66

    -1.4%

  • SCU

    0.0000

    12.72

    0%

  • BCC

    1.7100

    88.14

    +1.94%

  • VOD

    -0.0900

    11.43

    -0.79%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    22.89

    +0.17%

  • BCE

    -0.2300

    24.2

    -0.95%

  • JRI

    -0.0600

    13.09

    -0.46%

Tunisia plastic collectors spread as economic, migration woes deepen
Tunisia plastic collectors spread as economic, migration woes deepen / Photo: FETHI BELAID - AFP

Tunisia plastic collectors spread as economic, migration woes deepen

A towel draped over his head, Hamza Jabbari sets bags of plastic bottles onto a scale. He is among Tunisia's "barbechas", informal plastic recyclers whose increasing numbers reflect the country's economic -- and migratory -- woes.

Text size:

The 40-something-year-old said he starts the day off at dawn, hunching over bins and hunting for plastic before the rubbish trucks and other plastic collectors come.

"It's the most accessible work in Tunisia when there are no job offers," Jabbari said, weighing a day's haul in Bhar Lazreg, a working-class neighbourhood north of the capital, Tunis.

The work is often gruelling, with a kilogramme of plastic bottles worth only 0.5 to 0.7 Tunisian dinar -- less than $0.25.

In Tunis, it's common to see women weighed down by bags of plastic bottles along the roadside, or men weaving through traffic with towering loads strapped to their motorcycles.

"Everyone does it," said Jabbari.

- 'Supplementary job' -

Hamza Chaouch, head of the National Chamber of Recyclable Waste Collectors, estimated that there were roughly 25,000 plastic collectors across Tunisia, with 40 percent of them in the capital.

Yet, with the job an informal one, there is no official count of how many plastic collectors operate in Tunisia.

One thing is certain: their number has increased in recent years, said Chaouch, who also runs a plastic collection centre south of Tunis.

"It's because of the cost of living," he explained.

"At first, it was people with no income, but for the past two years, workers, retirees and cleaning women have also turned to this work as a supplementary job."

Around 16 percent of Tunisians lived under the poverty line as of 2021, the latest available official figures.

Unemployment currently hovers around 16 percent, with inflation at 5.4 percent.

The ranks of these recyclers have also grown with the arrival of migrants from sub-Saharan Africa -- often hoping to reach Europe but caught in limbo with both the EU and Tunis cracking down on Mediterranean crossings.

Tunisia is a key transit country for thousands of sub-Saharan migrants seeking to reach Europe by sea each year, with the Italian island of Lampedusa only 150 kilometres (90 miles) away.

Abdelkoudouss, a 24-year-old from Guinea, said he began collecting plastic to make ends meet but also to save up enough money to return home after failing two crossing attempts to Europe.

For the past two months, he has worked at a car wash, he said, but the low pay forced him to start recycling on the side.

"Life here is not easy," said Abdelkoudouss, adding he came to the capital after receiving "a lot of threats" amid tension between migrants and locals in Sfax, a coastal city in central Tunisia.

- 'Just trying to survive' -

Thousands of migrants had set up camp on the outskirts of Sfax, before authorities began dismantling the makeshift neighbourhoods this year.

Tensions flared in early 2023 when President Kais Saied said "hordes of sub-Saharan migrants" were threatening the country's demographic composition.

Saied's statement was widely circulated online and unleashed a wave of hostility that many migrants feel still lingers.

"There's a strong rivalry in this work," said Jabbari, glancing at a group of sub-Saharan African migrants nearby.

"These people have made life even more difficult for us. I can't collect enough plastic because of them."

Chaouch, the collection centre manager, was even more blunt: "We don't accept sub-Saharans at our centre. Priority goes to Tunisians."

In contrast, 79-year-old Abdallah Omri, who heads another centre in Bhar Lazreg, said he "welcomes everyone".

"The people who do this work are just trying to survive, whether they're Tunisian, sub-Saharan or otherwise," he said.

"We're cleaning up the country and feeding families," he added proudly.

G.Kucera--TPP