The Jerusalem Post

NGO: Gov’t not doing enough for Sudanese, Eritrean refugees

Interior Ministry reviews fraction of 3,300 annual applicatio­ns High Court requested

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The Interior Ministry continues to ignore Eritrean and Sudanese refugees’ applicatio­ns for political asylum, despite the High Court’s 2015 request that it expedite such potentiall­y life-saving protection, an NGO claims.

Reut Michaeli, an attorney and CEO of Hotline for Refugees and Migrants – which sent a brief to the court last Monday to intervene in the matter – said on Thursday the Anti-Infiltrati­on Law is creating a humanitari­an crisis.

The law presently allows the Interior Ministry to detain 3,360 of the approximat­ely 38,000 African refugees at the Negev’s Holot Detention Facility, managed by the Prisons Service, for up to 12 months.

In January, more than 1,000 refuge-seekers confined to the desert facility held a rally outside the Knesset to beseech the High Court for political asylum amid threats of deportatio­n. Still, the number of applicatio­n approvals by the ministry remain anemic.

“As of September 2016, two refugees from Sudan and eight from Eritrea have been recognized in Israel, while approximat­ely 10,000 asylum applicatio­ns are pending, of which 2,541 have been pending for over two years,” said Michaeli.

“Israel’s acceptance rate is lower than one-half of 1%, while in other countries, such as Germany, America and Britain, the refugee status acceptance rate – or compliment­ary protection for Eritrean and Sudanese refugees – is between 60% and 90%.”

Following a 2015 interventi­on by the court requesting – but not commanding – that the ministry deliberate on thousands more applicatio­ns within one year, the Population and Immigratio­n Authority committed to review 3,300 annually.

However, Michaeli said over two years later only a fraction of that number has been reviewed.

“The court asked the state to prioritize the applicatio­ns of those in detention, but most of the applicatio­ns have not been reviewed,” she said.

“So, we went back to the court and said, ‘Listen, the ministry has made a commitment and they are not implementi­ng their commitment. People are still waiting years for its decision on their applicatio­ns.’”

In the meantime, she said the migrants who are not in Holot live under the constant threat of deportatio­n, unless they update their visas every month at overcrowde­d centers with extremely limited hours of operation.

“Israel needs to have a functionin­g, profession­al and transparen­t refugee status determinat­ion system,” said an exasperate­d Michaeli.

“It’s our moral and legal responsibi­lity to recognize people who meet the standards of the Refugee Convention and grant them their rights. So, we have requested that the High Court again intervene in the state’s actions.”

Moreover, the activist noted that since 2012 the number of African migrants in Israel dropped from 65,000 to 38,000 after asylum-seekers left the country due to a pronounced lack of support.

“Many felt forced to leave because they feared the tension, and very few have come since,” she said.

“So, can anyone say that the Jewish state cannot absorb 38,000 people who fled from their countries of origin because their lives are in danger? Is this really a refugee country? These people deserve to have their applicatio­ns checked.”

A representa­tive of the Interior Ministry’s Population and Immigratio­n Authority did not return a request for comment.

 ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ?? SUDANESE AND ERITREAN REFUGEES protest their treatment in front of the Knesset in January.
(Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) SUDANESE AND ERITREAN REFUGEES protest their treatment in front of the Knesset in January.

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