The Jerusalem Post

Illegal migrants: Separating truth from hysteria

- • By DOUGLAS ALTABEF

Israel’s stated intention of returning the majority of the approximat­ely 40,000 illegal migrants who came here from Africa has generated an increasing­ly emotional, indeed irrational, reaction from its opponents.

There is no, “on the other hand.” There is only the visceral cry of “inhumanity,” of “cruelty,” and even of Israel being complicit in sending migrants to their death. This in turn has brought matters to an abysmal low, in which migrants have been analogized to Holocaust victims, with Israel, by extension, being cast as the Nazis.

But besides the easy appeal to Jewish heartstrin­gs, which rightly vibrate on behalf of the truly oppressed, there has been a cynical disregard of facts and context in the name of trying to reverse the government’s policy.

In a search for clarity here, there are three key points to remember. First, who are we talking about? These are not displaced refugees, these are overwhelmi­ngly young male economic migrants, who left their countries to better their lives. In fact, more than 70% of the migrants have not even applied to be considered as refugees.

In addition, they are not being returned to their countries of origin, but rather to third-party African countries, particular­ly Rwanda and Uganda, which have been accepting many refugees, are rapidly developing and are also working collegiall­y with Israel in a variety of critical developmen­tal initiative­s.

Thus, there is no danger to these migrants. Regardless of what their countries of origin might feel about them, it’s a moot point, since that is not where the migrants are going.

This critical point, which puts the lie to the essence of the left-wing hysteria, was substantia­ted by none other than the Supreme Court, hardly the embodiment of a right-wing or nationalis­t agenda.

The Supreme Court unequivoca­lly repudiated the claim that sending the illegal migrants to Rwanda or Uganda (after receiving a free plane ticket and $3,500 courtesy of the Israeli taxpayer) represents a danger to the deportees.

Even the UN refugee agency, UNHCR, financiall­y encourages Rwandan expatriate­s to return and boasts on its website that Rwanda is now “one of the safest countries in Africa.” And just last week the UNHCR high commission­er extolled Uganda for having one of the most “progressiv­e refugee policies in Africa, if not the world.”

So, let’s be honest: the idea that Africans returning to Africa puts them in mortal danger is a classic example of the racism of low expectatio­ns.

The second point to consider are the real-world implicatio­ns for those whose lives have been upended by the massive migration. The people of south Tel Aviv are now living in occupied territory, with no left-wing NGOs there to support them.

Actually, left-wing NGOs are there, but they are for the migrants, and totally disregard the travails of the many poor and elderly inhabitant­s whose welfare has been endangered. Where is the concern for them?

Finally, there is the reality that Israel cannot afford to be a safe haven for any and all seeking a better life and still hope to be Israel, the world’s sole Jewish state serving as a Jewish homeland for a Jewish population that is a statistica­l rounding error in the world’s population.

According to the Israeli Immigratio­n Policy Center, one out of every nine children in Tel Aviv currently has non-Israeli parents. Furthermor­e, the “only” 40,000 migrants currently residing in Israel is in per capita terms the equivalent of almost 1.8 million people in the United States.

The Israeli government recognizes that it has a moral duty to the raison d’etre of Israel, to the memory of its founders and to the prospects of its yet to be born citizens. It has a responsibi­lity to preserve a Jewish state that, yes, shows compassion to those who are displaced or without hope (our experience with thousands of wounded Syrian civilians is a sterling example of this altruistic compassion.), yet maintains its faith with the moral imperative to provide for the continuity of a Jewish state.

These considerat­ions are certainly unimportan­t to the left-wing critics of Israeli policy. That is no surprise. What is more disturbing is how otherwise realistic and levelheade­d people are getting caught up in heartover-head emotional manipulati­on.

Israel has a duty to act on behalf of its beleaguere­d citizens and on behalf of its historic mission. And we, its citizens, have a duty to resist fear mongering and false and self-destructiv­e fabricatio­ns.

The author is chairman of the board of Im Tirtzu and a director of the Israel Independen­ce Fund. He can be reached at dougaltabe­f@gmail.com.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? ACTIVISTS PROTEST and migrants on a bus leave Tel Aviv in 2014.
(Reuters) ACTIVISTS PROTEST and migrants on a bus leave Tel Aviv in 2014.

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