The Jerusalem Post

NGO slams state for backlog crisis over refugee requests from African migrants

- • By YONAH JEREMY BOB

There is no quick fix or time frame for resolving the backlog crisis of addressing refugee status requests from African migrants, the Population Immigratio­n and Border Authority told The Jerusalem Post on Sunday.

The Hotline for Refugees and Migrants slammed the state’s handling of the matter to date as inadequate, saying it was a symptom of an ongoing agenda to discourage refugee requests and coerce African migrants into leaving the country.

“Israel’s obligation­s under internatio­nal convention­s require it to review refugee status requests” within a reasonable time, the Hotline said, adding that the backlog could easily be resolved by opening Internet registrati­on to migrants.

The backlog crisis was first reported by Haaretz on Friday as dating back around three months.

In recent months, it has become near impossible to submit a request for refugee status, with migrants forced to wait in line for several hours to do so at relevant government offices.

The situation further deteriorat­ed when migrants were unable to schedule appointmen­ts the first day they came and instead received handwritte­n notes from building guards allowing them to return to file their requests at a later date. Recently, the guards stopped handing out the notes, and migrants say they were told that the uptick in requests meant they could not file requests at the present time.

The Population Immigratio­n and Border Authority said refugee status requests had skyrockete­d to 1,600-1,900 per month since January 1. This jump has caused an unavoidabl­e backlog beyond its control, it said, and handing out notes for later appointmen­ts was a failed experiment to cope with the situation. At an undefined time in the future, the PIBA said, it will expand to a larger office to take in more requests.

The Hotline for Refugees and Migrants said that all of the above were excuses, and that online registrati­on, among other solutions, could quickly alleviate the problem if the PIBA were not intent on using red tape to block migrants from gaining refugee status.

The Hotline also said the state was delaying and rejecting most applicatio­ns, and that at the very least, it needed to permit migrants to file their requests.

Asked why it had not opened online registrati­on, PIBA said: “We are doing the best we can to handle the issue to the best of our ability. Providing a ‘band-aid’ solution to the problem will not solve it... The situation does not revolve around registrati­on but around capacity to receive requests and other issues.”

When asked what would be a reasonable time frame for resolving the backlog, PIBA said it would not “toss out fake times. At this moment we are working on it as much as possible.”

 ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ?? MIGRANTS LOITER on Levinsky Street near the Tel Aviv Central Bus Station in 2013.
(Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) MIGRANTS LOITER on Levinsky Street near the Tel Aviv Central Bus Station in 2013.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel