Visit the new AsenaTv Website

https://asenatv.com

JEWISH GROUPS DENOUNCE ISRAEL’S PLANS TO DEPORT 40,000 AFRICAN ASYLUM SEEKERS

Jewish human rights groups are denouncing Israel’s plans to deport almost 40,000 African asylum seekers, defending refugees whom Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu calls “infiltrators.” On Sunday, Netanyahu’s 28-member executive cabinet voted unanimously to close the Holot detention center

Jewish human rights groups are denouncing Israel’s plans to deport almost 40,000 African asylum seekers, defending refugees whom Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu calls “infiltrators.”

On Sunday, Netanyahu’s 28-member executive cabinet voted unanimously to close the Holot detention center and give African asylum seekers three months to leave the country or face deportation to an undisclosed country. If they refuse to go, they will be imprisoned indefinitely. The proposal will now be considered by the Israeli legislature, where it is expected to pass.

“The infiltrators will have the option to be imprisoned or leave the country,” Israel’s Ministry of Public Security said in a statement. Officials also said that the mass deportations are meant “to protect the Jewish and democratic character” of Israel.

But opponents reject the deportations as a violation of Israel’s founding principles.

“Israel’s failure to follow the Jewish imperative to protect and care for the gerim—the landless sojourners who seek refuge among us—is a far greater threat to the Jewish character of the state than is the community of African migrants and asylum seekers who have escaped forced military service, torture and crimes against humanity in Eritrea and Sudan and sought safe haven in Israel,” Rabbi Michael Lezak, co-chairman of T’ruah, a human rights group, told Newsweek.

The Israeli government says that there are 38,043 African migrants living in the country, most of them hailing from war-torn countries such as Eritrea and South Sudan, having illegally crossed the Israeli border between 2007 and 2012.

Some Israelis argue that African asylum seekers have worsened living conditions in Tel Aviv and other communities in southern Israel.

“This is the right policy to ease the suffering of residents in South Tel Aviv and other neighborhoods where the infiltrators reside,” Interior Minister Aryeh Deri, who initiated the deportation proposal, said on Sunday, according to Voice of America. “My duty is to return peace and quiet to South Tel Aviv and many neighborhoods across the country.”

Netanyahu has even promised that he will “return South Tel Aviv to the citizens of Israel,” claiming that the African migrants “are not refugees, but infiltrators looking for work.”

But human rights advocates say the migrants deserve a fair hearing.

“Without that, they should not be removed, regardless of what the situation is in Tel Aviv,” Melanie Nezer, senior vice president for public affairs at HIAS, a Jewish humanitarian nonprofit organization that provides assistance to refugees, told Newsweek.

Nezer argued that as a signatory to the U.N.’s 1951 Refugee Convention, Israel is both legally and morally obligated to protect refugees and other persons in need of international protection.

“The Refugee Convention came about after the Holocaust because the international community wanted to make sure that something like it never happened again,” Nezer said. “As the first signatory to the convention, Israel has a responsibility to uphold its standards.”

Nezer also noted that Israel should remember its own history, as the nation was founded as a refuge for Jews who had escaped the horrors of World War II and built on the premise “Never again.”

“Israel needs to do right by these African asylum seekers,” she said.

The U.N. High Council for Human Rights (UNHCR) has also criticized the move, saying that Israel should be more forthright and transparent about its relocation plans.

“Due to the secrecy surrounding this policy and the lack of transparency concerning its implementation, it has been very difficult for UNHCR to follow up and systematically monitor the situation of people relocated to these African countries,” the organization said in a statement. “UNHCR, however, is concerned that these persons have not found adequate safety or a durable solution to their plight and that many have subsequently attempted dangerous onward movements within Africa or to Europe.”

Furthermore, Israel has restricted the freedom of asylum seekers through a series of policies aimed at encouraging self-departure, a UNHCR official said on Sunday, according to Al-Jazeera.

Critics say that Israel’s acceptance rate of asylum seekers from these nations is considerably lower than that of most developed countries; according to the United Nations High Commission for Human Rights, Israel has recognized only eight Eritrean and two Sudanese asylum seekers as refugees since 2009. And, according to Al-Jazeera, “Two hundred Sudanese refugees from the Darfur region were also granted humanitarian status.”

Israel reportedly has agreements with Rwanda and Uganda to take in the asylum seekers that Israel wants to deport and that Israel pays up to $5,000 for each deportee taken in by the third parties.

Israel and its partner governments say that it plans to give asylum seekers the basic necessities to start their new lives in a new country.

But a 2014 investigation by Haaretz found that asylum seekers who “voluntarily departed” Israel for Rwanda “arrived in the country with no status, no permits and no path to livelihood.” Furthermore, “some were directed from Rwanda to Uganda with no warning and no infrastructure in place.”

The Sunday vote comes after an Israeli High Court upheld the country’s controversial practice of deporting undocumented migrants to an unnamed third country without their consent in August.

As noted by The Times of Israel, deportations to a third country are rare in the Western world. Only two other countries—Italy and Australia—have attempted to deport migrants and asylum seekers to third countries, but local courts in both countries shot down the move because it was found to be in violation of the 1951 Refugee Convention.

Newsweek

 

Subscribe ASSENNA YouTube to get Radio Assenna shows on time:

aseye.asena@gmail.com

Review overview
16 COMMENTS
  • weddi Ekele Guzai November 27, 2017

    Gongralution to Agazian

  • Z. Hagos November 27, 2017

    No country has the right to throw refugees back to the oppressor (or his friends) who forced them to flee their country. The Eritrean refugees, as victims of persecution and tyranny, should not be turned away for that is a support for the oppressor who abused and made them hate their lives. The UN should intervene and find them solutions.
    ..
    Since the Jewish Human Rights Groups are denouncing the deportation plans, with their help there must be a way to bring the refugees’ case to local courts or the UN. The faster the Eritrean Diasporas demand for the plans of deportation to be reconsidered the better. For sure our discussions will help. Let’s, therefore, search for possible solutions that can save those endangered refugees.

  • Tesafai November 27, 2017

    … Thank you the peace loving humanitarian Israelis for speaking against the Natanyahu government.

    When will our Muslim Arabic “brothers” speak up and demonstrate against the slavery and injustice perpetrated by Arab Muslims on poor and innocent black Africans, Eritreans, Ethiopian and Darfur? Will the Arabic and Muslim people and their supporters still keep quite like a rat – Anchuwa – to protect the shame of their Arab masters as they did to the slavery, torture, organ snatching, rape and murder of Eritreans asylum seekers in Egypt Sinai, Libya and Sudan?

    Will the Arabic and Muslim people demonstrate as these courageous Israelis of Tel Aviv ? Will the Arab Muslim world stand up and condemn the slavery and racism of blacks in the Arab and Islamic world and demonstrate in the streets of Cairo, Aman, Beirut, Dubai, Riyadh, Mecca, Medina, Tunis, Lahore, Islamabad, Khartoum …?
    Will the Arabs and their servants cry : Allah Akbar, Justice to Africans, No, to Arab Slavery?

    Will you be surprised if an Arab Abeed shouts back to defend his Arabic masters below?

  • Tesafai November 28, 2017

    ኣንቱም ሰባት እዞም ጎይቶትና ዓረብን ኣሕዋትና ሃገራት ዓረብን ደኣ መኣስ እዮም ኣብ ከተማታት ሊብያ ፣ ግብጺ ፣ ሱዳን ፣ ስዑዲ ዓረብ ፣ መካ መዲና ፣ ርያድ ፣ ባቕዳድ ፣ ዱባይ ፣ ቱኒዝያ ሞሮኮ ፣ ባኪስታን ፣ ኣፍጋኒስታን ፣ ኢንዶነጅያ ፣ ኣብ ኩሉ ሃገራት ኣስላም ሰላማዊ ሰልፊ ጌሮም ዝወጹ?
    ተራእይኒ እኳ ሃገራት ዓረብ ኣብ ጽርግያ ወጺኦም፥

    ፍትሒ ንኣፍርቃውያን !
    ኣላህ ኣክባር !
    ባርነት ዓቢድነት ይወገድ !
    ዓሌትነት ኣንጻር ጸለምቲ ኣስላም ኣብ ሃገራት ዓረብ ይጥፋእ !

    እንዳበሉ ክጭድሩ።
    ነዚ ሼር ሸርሽርዎ እንተሰምዑና።

  • meretse November 28, 2017

    Very different opnion. Many of you might find it damn but I can not help it. Before I write my comments I have asked myself several times and I simply could not find an easy answer.
    A refugee is anyone who leaves his country behind and asks asylum in an another country. Leaving your country behind means you will not be able to find it again some where else, certainly not on this planet. In other words, in geopolitics there is only one motherland. This is somewhat like one can have only one mother. Then this will lead me to ask myself if i leave my mother behind, how is that, I expect to find a better mother somewhere else? If the country that you landed (the host country) said, I simply do not like you, why do you have to brag the nation to like you? In other words saying “I do not like you means, i hate you”. Period and case closed. If Israel says, I do not want you why don’t you say the same to you and leave the country. Let alone Israel you already have left your motherland behind.
    Second if Rwanda welcomes you what exactly is the problem not going there. After all it is a beautiful country. Is it because Rwand is an Afican country and Israel is a Middle eastern county? What if Rwanda was Australia? Smile haaaa. For me it is better to live in Rwanda rather than in Israel’s concentration camp. If u do not like neiter of them then the only option you have is: You Figured Out.

    • amanuel November 28, 2017

      U are right bro. A country may or may not recognize u as refugee. Even if it recognize u as refugee, it does not have any obligation to accept and protect u. Especially when u cross another country it simply means u are shoping a country. We all know the situation in eritrea but if ethiopia allow u to live and is willing to provide u with protection, then why cant live there. Or if u want to speak arabic sudan is another choice.

  • Danilo November 28, 2017

    My opinion differs on the basis of choice ( on search of save place ).as brothers meretse and amanuel propose knowing no country guaranty safe haven. If we need the real haven is in our beloved Eritrea. Let’s make it safe first by going back to fight is the only solution.

  • AHMED SALEH !!! November 28, 2017

    Most of us were refugees before we find a host country to resettle . We
    experienced the hardships , confusion and anxiety on living at foreign
    land . Now to say otherwise when it comes about these refugee issues
    only shows our ignorance . To wish them well was enough rather than say
    no sense talk because regardless nationalities they are human beings in
    search for better future .

    • amanuel November 28, 2017

      Ahmed
      What about if the jewish as they call themselves say-we hate u, we do not want to see u in our land. Am not saying the young eritreans who suffered a lot are not refugees or have no problem living in eritrea-infact they can not have control of their life back home. We know that, the world knows that although europe and usa want to pretend that it is inhabitable for its citizens. To the jew, we have to tell them that we too hate them and leave for africa. We can not force them to like us.

  • Danilo November 28, 2017

    You are right Ahmed, but let’s say it loud or ask our selves, what did we achieve being refugees for so long years. my answer is non. What am saying is we got safety for some extend for sure but Eritrea is not safe. Our next generation is in question of existence. let’s start with our children shading there hope worldwide. I my self could say many stories on my 40 years in exile. In one word, half of our population in exile. Therefore, being refugee with all privilege (sub-existence ) do not garante the basic aspiration if we consider the basic issue.

  • meretse November 28, 2017

    Hi All,
    Ahmed says, once up on a time I was a refugee too and I understand the hardiships. Ahmed BRAVO! for remembering the past. And, because of remebering the hardiships it helped you to have a big heart and not a big lung like us. I know you did not go in details but you were close to spill the beans that your hardships were a little bit different from them. Could this be someone was wishing somewhere around the corner to have a good luck, such as: may your route be as smooth as green grass ዝረገጽካዮ ለምለም …
    Your second opinion emphasizes with how one person is smart or ignorant. Those who agree with you are simply smart while those who do not are simply ignorant. Check yourself. This is not how you measure smartness, ignorance ……
    Thirdly, you dared to say that our comments are tasteless and nonsense. Well, Ahmed, the truth is always sour and always hurts. Here is my truth: once I was a refugee too. Because I did not have enough well wishers I ended up landing near Bantu. Bantu is an ancient city located deep in the Southern Sudan region. That was only less than a month after I crossed the border. Again, that happened before I have any chance of knowing a single town or the city. Having said that, I was lucky to a have a job.
    The place I used to work was an open field where lions and lionesses roar day time and hyenas gruel at night.
    And guess what? when I went there I met so many Canadians, Americas, South Koreans, Indians, Kenyans, and couple Ethiopians…. Proof that the world is blue wherever you go.
    Down there no one said you are dirty or dirtier than me. No one said, you are “meqefel” unless for chatting. No one said, go back to where you came from otherwise I will put in the barbed fence.
    Had someone said that to my option was to leave quietly.
    Ahmed Saleh, if someone calls “dirty” would still kneel down and beg him to offer you some of his clothes to wear and prove him that then you look clean and neat OR you just say thank you and leave. I would do the later one.

  • meretse November 28, 2017

    Coorection Please read as—- the the sky is alwas blue wherever you go.

POST A COMMENT