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Israel is offering illegal immigrants US$3,500 and a one-way ticket home
as it begins to crack down on refugees, who face prison if they don’t take up
the deal. Rights groups are appalled at the
move, saying Israel should be doing more to protect them.
Israel says the tough move is
necessary to send a message to migrants that making the journey is not
worthwhile in the first place. As deterrents it has built a steel fence along
the border with Egypt, houses migrants in a detention camp in the middle of a
desert, and has stopped issuing work permits to deter would-be migrants.
RT.com reports:
Israel was founded by refugees and continues to welcome Jews from around the world who wish to relocate there. During the 1990s over a million Jews from the former Soviet Union crossed the welcome mat.
Israel was founded by refugees and continues to welcome Jews from around the world who wish to relocate there. During the 1990s over a million Jews from the former Soviet Union crossed the welcome mat.
Jews from Ethiopia have also looked
to settle in Israel, however, they have not had an easy time of things in
trying to start a new life.
On Tuesday, hundreds of Ethiopian
Jews rallied peacefully against the discrimination and racism they claim they
are experiencing. This followed a national outcry after a video emerged of an
Israeli man of Ethiopian descent being beaten by police.
Approximately 135,500 Ethiopian Jews
live in Israel, and more than a third of them – over 50,000 – were born there.
However, it would seem they are
fortunate in comparison to their African neighbours who are not of the Jewish
faith. Over the last six years, Israel has a dismal rate of accepting refugees
from Eritrea. Despite the fact 300,000 asylum seekers from the country in the
horn of Africa have been offered refugee status around the world, Israel has
accepted only four people.
Aside from making it hard for
potential refugees to get to Israel, the country is also giving those already
there incentives to leave.
A government program has offered
those without legal papers the chance to return home with US$3,500 in cash, the
option of going to a third country, or spend an indefinite time in an Israeli
prison.
Over the past two years, over 9,000
Africans have taken up Israel’s offer and left. Before the crackdown began
African workers could regularly be found around Tel Aviv doing menial jobs, such
as washing dishes and cleaning hotel rooms which Israeli’s would not touch.
“It is a form of coercion, but it is
not forced deportation,” said Sigal Rozen, who works as the public policy
director for an Israeli human rights group called Hotline for Refugees and
Migrants. However, Rozen was adamant, “Israel should do more,” the Washington
Post reported.
She added that Sudanese refugees who
had fled bloodshed and civil war in their home country “are now waiting in line
to go back.”
Those who opt to stay in Israel face
a tough and desolate life, as they are not allowed to work. Housed in the Holot
detention centre in the middle of the Negev desert, they are more than an hour
from the nearest large settlement. Although they are allowed out during the day,
they have to return by nightfall or risk being sent to the prison next to the
detention facility.
Holot
detention centre memorial for fellow refugees deported from #Israel, killed by
#ISIS Image source: Annie Slemrod
@annieslem
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Despite the desperate circumstances
the refugees face, many will never contemplate returning to their countries of
origin. On the contrary, they dream of being able to travel to Europe to start
a new life.
“Being beheaded by ISIS [the Islamic
State] or sinking on a boat is scary,” said 28-year-old Mutasim Ali, who
arrived in Israel in 2009 from the Darfur region in Sudan. He has spent the
past year in the detention centre. “But you can’t really stay here, wasting
your life, doing nothing,” he told the Washington Post.
It has been reported that Israel has been in
negotiations with African nations to accept more refugees, with the media
speculating that Israel could offer these countries technology, money or
contracts if they accept asylum seekers who are trying to settle in Israel.
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