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Naufrages en Méditerranée, à qui la faute? RTS Quinze Minutes 26 octobre 2013

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    [Man] Quinze Minutes: the editors' reporting magazine
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    [Woman] After the Lampedusa shipwreck,
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    we carry on our inquiry into the causes of recent migrants' boats shipwrecks.
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    Quinze Minutes magazine crossed the Mediterranean
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    to meet NGOs, academics and families who inquire
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    into the dramatic circumstances of Europe-bound migration.
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    "Shipwrecks in the Mediterranean: who is guilty?"
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    a reportage in Tunis by Alexandre Habay, edited by Sylvain Michel.
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    [coast guard] Pronto? A che distanza siete da Lampedusa?
    (Hello, how far are you from Lampedusa)
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    [shipwrecked man] [unclear - in Arabic?]
    [coast gard] Dove siete? (Where are you?)
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    [shipwrecked man] [unclear - in Arabic?]
    [coast gard] Dove siete? (Where are you?)
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    [shipwrecked man] [unclear - in Arabic?]
    [coast gard] Pronto? (Hello)
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    [Alexandre Habay (?)] What we heard is a Mayday call made via cell phone
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    by someone on the boat that got shipwrecked in front of Lampedusa
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    on September 6, 2012.
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    It's a Mayday call. It's really, really tragic to hear that.
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    The caller's hopelessness perfectly comes through
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    and unfortunately, this call is also rather unclear, actually.
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    This is certainly one of the reasons why it was difficult for the Italian coast guards
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    to immediately identify the position of the boat after this call,
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    and this may have been a cause of the very shipwreck
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    and of over 70 people's disappearance.
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    This incident actually remains a mystery:
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    over 50 people were rescued, about ten bodies were found
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    but the other people were never found
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    and thus it is not known whether they in fact survived
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    or if the boat sank,
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    as neither the wreck nor the other bodies were found.
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    GSM coverage usually starts a few kilometers from coasts.
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    So we know that this boat was very, very near Lampione
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    when this Mayday call was made - and there were several such calls
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    and several calls to passengers' families too.
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    [music]
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    [Charles Heller] So, my name is Charles Heller.
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    I'm a reseracher at London University and I am presently here
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    to support families and associations
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    in reconstructing various sea incidents
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    in order to understand what actually happened to all these missing or dead people:
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    in fact, these families whom we shall meet are searching for the truth.
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    [Imed Soltani] Well, I'm Imed Soltani.
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    I've just founded this association called "La terre pour tous" (Earth for all).
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    I'm Tunisian, an Arab
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    and I have to work more than you
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    because if your European children want to go to Tunisia or Algeria
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    they can come without hassle.
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    But as to us, if someone wants to go to the other side, they must die at sea.
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    And there's this name, I can tell you this name
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    There's the name of Mohamed El Himi, this one
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    There's Husein ben Ahmed el Himi, there's Nebil el Gazueli, there's Ali ben Attar ben Bouli,
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    There's Sadr ben Bouli,
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    all these names, this Kerim ben Ourdi Mbarki,
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    this one you see a third (check) -- this one is the land of Lampedusa.
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    [Habay] So actually, you've enlarged pictures from Italian TV news
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    and you try to identify these young boat people?
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    [Soltani] Yes. Families have recognized these children.
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    [Habay] Thus these young people, visibly, survived`
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    Where are they now? Do you know where they are?
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    Are they in touch with their families? Did it end w--
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    [Soltani] No, nobody, no contact with families.
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    People who get into Lampedusa don't give their real name.
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    They tell other names.
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    Some people don't even want to give their fingerprints.
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    [children's voices]
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    [Habay] What are we looking at?
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    [Man] This one is my brother, this one.
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    [Habay] What's his name
    [Man] M'hamed Haboubi - Mohamed Haboub.
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    [Habay] Yet there are -- well, the pictures is not very clear -
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    yet there are many -- are you sure it's him?
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    [Man] Yes, my brother: he's been living with me for 22 years.
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    [Habay] And where do you think your brother is, now?
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    [Man] I don't know, it's the province (?) -- we are trying to find where he is.
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    [Habay] Because of course, if he'd safely reached Europe,
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    he would have called you; are you expecting a call from him?
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    [Man] Of course, but the Italian government made no declaration about these people.
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    [Heller] Clearly, any time a relative is missing,
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    the family can't help but imagining what their fate might be.
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    And people in Switzerland whose relatives are missing go through the same experience
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    our mindset can't help but imagining the worse as well as the best scripts
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    thus I think that the first thing these families request
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    is to know what happened to their relatives.
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    [Habay] Thus you, Charles Heller, in this research you are doing,
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    funded for instance by the Swiss national research fund,
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    thus by what means do you try to reconstruct what happened at sea?
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    Do you have technical means, for instance, do you conduct an inquiry?
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    [Heller] Nowadays, incidents leave multiple traces:
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    when there are survivors, their accounts,
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    many migrants phone their families.
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    Then there are all kinds of other elements that can be used, like satellite images,
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    which can enable us to understand which boats, which ships
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    were near a given boat.
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    [Habay] So why are you trying to reconstruct this context, actualy?
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    In order to identify responsibilities?
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    [Heller] In the last 20 years, there have been over 14'000 deaths
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    at the sea boarders, only of the Mediterranean.
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    And these are only documented instances, so obviously, there have been many more
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    and no one answers for these deaths.
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    In 2011 there was a turning point
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    with NATO's military intervention in Libya,
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    and with the shared feeling of many associations, who said:
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    "But there has been a record number of deaths this year in central Mediterranea
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    whereas over 40 NATO ships are deployed in front of Libyan coasts,
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    precisely in the area where these deaths happened."
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    And in this context, we made an inquiry about a ship that left Tripoli
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    on March 27, 2011
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    and after barely 24 hours, was in distress
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    with no more fuel.
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    It drifted for 14 days in the area monitored by NATO
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    which, again, was probably, at that time,
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    the most monitored sea area in the world.
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    Italian and Maltese authorities, NATO, all new about their distress.
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    In spite of the fact that there had been two visits by an helicopter marked "army",
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    and when half the people on board were already dead,
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    passengers drifted near a big army ship
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    whose crew just photographed them before abandoning them to their fate.
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    In the end, only 9 out of the 72 passengers survived.
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    The report we wrote about this tragedy, this shipwreck
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    was the basis for a claim filed against the various states involved in the Libya operation.
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    This is the first attempt to identify who is directly answerable for these deaths
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    beyond, again the deep political responsibility
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    of the European Union and of the Southern Mediterranean sates.
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    And we also try to make inquiries about other shipwrecks that happened.
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    We are closely following incidents that happened in Lampedusa in recent days.
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    [Voices in Arabic]
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    [Habay or Heller?] So we are in Gebel Achmad, a very lower class neighborhood of Tunis
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    from which about twenty boys left on the boat
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    whose Mayday call we heard.
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    We're going to meet families who are still wondering what happened on that day.
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    [Voices in Arabic]
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    [Bensmida] My name is Mohamed Bensmida.
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    I am the father of Ahmed Bensmida who was shipwrecked on September 6, 2012
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    [words in arabic] 17 year old.
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    [Interpreter] His son is 17 year old and he wanted to do as his friends from this neighborhood,
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    so, in order to better and change his life,
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    he suddenly left.
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    [Bensmida ?] The agent...
    [Habay?] 136 people on board?
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    [Bensmida ?] Yes. That's when they arrived, 80 amesh, missing.
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    [Habay] What happened? Does one know?
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    [Bensmida] They say that they are, maneh, that the boat got broken, but [continues in Arabic]
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    [Interpreter] The script becomes unclear after that.
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    [Interpreter + Bensmida in Arabic] They are not convinced of what really happened.
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    His son's friends say that they saw his son swimming, in front of them.
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    And as night fell, they didn't see him afterwards.
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    It's ironic that a pregnant woman can reach the coast swimming
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    and that others haven't - well, that they died.
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    [Bensmida ?] It isn't true. I'd like to have more explanations.
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    [Habay] If he'd managed to reach Italy, you would have heard from him,
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    or was he registered by authorities?
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    [Interpreter + Bensmida in Arabic] He says they live in a delusion
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    because they've heard that some people reached the shore,
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    then some are in prison.
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    What's sickening is the delusion and vagueness.
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    [Bensmida] They made a Mayday call, Italia Ouini (?) made this Mayday call.
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    [Interpreter] The Italian and Tunisian governments are involved in this shipwreck
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    because there was a Mayday call, he said,
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    and normally, they must respond, and there was no response.
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    [Zwaoui] [speaks in Arabic]
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    [Interpreter] So she says her name is Samia Zwaoui (?).
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    Her son is Bachlis Kilini (?)
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    and he has been missing since September 6, 2012.
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    [Interpreter + Zwaoui in Arabic] She had --
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    out of 56 survivors who said that the hull sank.
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    And her son's friend got a message saying
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    that he saw her (his?) children being taken away by Italian police in Palermo, in the port. athlewa? (check)
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    [Habay] OK. So you think he is still alive?
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    [Zwaoui] [speaks in Arabic]
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    [Interpreter] She has a feeling that her son is alive.
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    [Zwaoui and the interpreter speak in Arabic]
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    [Interpreter] She got a phone call from a double zero plus 44 number,
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    and someone said "Hello" several times
    [Habay[ That's England.
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    [Interpreter] I don't know what country code +44 is, but anyway, it's someone who --
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    she felt it was her son because it was 5 months and half after the shipwreck
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    and it was just to make sure whether it was actually her voice, his mother's voice, or not.
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    She tried to ring back but she got a busy tone.
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    [Zwaoui] [in Arabic]
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    [Interpreter] She even tried to call back yesterday.
    [Zwaoui] [speaks in Arabic]
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    [Heller or Habay?] So, we've just heard these accounts.
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    It's rather difficult to know what to think of them.
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    Maybe some families are still in denial.
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    Anyway, as often happens when people go missing,
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    these families hang on to the slightest hope.these families hang on to the slightest hope.
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    [Prayer call; bus engine]
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    [Synthetic voice] Next stop, Vidy (?)
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    [Habay] So now, we are back in Switzerland, at Mont sur Lausanne,
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    and we are going towards the Civil Protection shelter where some asylum requesters are staying.
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    A group of young people are waiting there,
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    and among them, there is a Tunisian man with whom I have an appointment,
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    and we'll talk with him about these Mediterranean crossings.
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    [2 voices, in English and Arabic ?]
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    [Interpreter ?] They came, 300 people in a boat.
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    [Man speaks Arabic]
    [Interpreter] They came from Zarzis
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    a town on the Mediterranean shore. They paid 10'000 Euros to come here.
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    [Interpreter +man in Arabic] He came here after the 2011 revolution.
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    They denied his asylum request in Italy.
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    [Habay] And in Switzerland?
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    [Interpreter + man in Arabic] His asylum request was denied.
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    He must leave Switzerland by October 31.
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    [Habay] Do you think all that was worth it?
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    Taking these risks, paying 10'000 Euros, risking to die at sea?
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    Was it worth it to do that? Do you regret--
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    [Interpreter + man in Arabic] He regretted it
    [Habay] Why?
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    [Interpreter + man in Arabic] He is disappointed.
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    He came here looking for another, better, life, and he found something worse: he is in a bunker.
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    [Arabic song]
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    [Interpreter] "I've remained all alone in my exile, and I suffer, and I'm unlucky."
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    These are the lyrics of this song.
    [Arabic song]
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    [15 Minutes jingle]
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    [Journalist] This reportage can be seen again at any time on www.rtsinfo.ch
Title:
Naufrages en Méditerranée, à qui la faute? RTS Quinze Minutes 26 octobre 2013
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