The Jerusalem Post

200 African migrants awaiting deportatio­n being freed from jail

- (Amir Cohen/Reuters)

Israel was releasing about 200 jailed African migrants in the absence of a final deal to deport the thousands of Eritrean and Sudanese men who entered the country illegally, the Interior Ministry said on Sunday.

The government has been trying to finalize an agreement with Uganda to take in the migrants, who traveled to Israel by foot through the Egyptian border over the past decade.

Most of the 200 men set for release were sent to a desert prison in recent months to await deportatio­n to Uganda.

But with negotiatio­ns continuing over a deal with Uganda, the Interior Ministry – which has faced court challenges by rights groups over the detentions – issued a statement on Sunday saying it would begin releasing the migrants.

The Israeli government says the 37,000 migrants in Israel are job seekers and that it has every right to protect its borders. The migrants and rights groups say they are seeking asylum and are fleeing war and persecutio­n.

About 4,000 migrants have left Israel for Rwanda and Uganda since 2013 under a voluntary program, but Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has come under pressure from his rightwing voter base to expel thousands more.

On Friday, Uganda acknowledg­ed for the first time that it was in talks to take in some 500 migrants, though it said it would only accept people who left voluntaril­y and not by forced deportatio­n.

Israel started handing out notices to male migrants from Eritrea and Sudan in January, giving them three months to take the voluntary deal with a plane ticket and $3,500 or risk being thrown in jail until they are deported.

The Supreme Court, however, has issued temporary injunction­s to give more time for petitioner­s to argue against the plan.

On Tuesday, government representa­tives told the court that an envoy was in an African country finalizing a deportatio­n deal after an arrangemen­t with Rwanda fell through.

Official documents submitted to the court said authoritie­s have identified close to 8,000 Eritrean and Sudanese migrants it would potentiall­y deport under compulsory expulsion. (Reuters)

 ??  ?? AFRICAN MIGRANTS walk out after being released from Saharonim Prison yesterday in the Negev.
AFRICAN MIGRANTS walk out after being released from Saharonim Prison yesterday in the Negev.

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