The Christian Science Monitor

From fisherman to smuggler: How ocean pollution fuels Tunisian migration

Walid Hadider (r.) prepares his nets for night fishing with his crewmate at the port of Kraten on the Kerkennah Islands, Tunisia, on Feb. 10. Mr. Hadider and his fellow fishermen claim that marine pollution and declining fish numbers are driving the islands' fishermen to smuggle migrants to Europe.

Ahmed insists he is not your typical migrant-smuggler. He is not part of an organized network, he has no ties to the criminal underworld, and, until recently, he had never committed an illegal act in his life.

He cites just one driving factor in his decision to hang up his fishing nets and send his boats on a one-way trip to Europe: pollution.

“I am just a man trying to make an honest living from the only thing I know – the ocean,” says Ahmed. “If they never polluted our waters, we would never have smuggled human beings.”

Ahmed, who did not wish to use his real name, is just

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