The Jewish Chronicle

Israel plans to deport African migrants

- BY ANSHEL PFEFFER

ISRAEL’S GOVERNMENT has decided to close the Holot migrant detention facility in the Negev desert as part of a crackdown on the country’s illegal migrants originatin­g from Africa.

Instead of being kept in open detention, those without a legal residence permit will be given the choice of going to prison indefinite­ly or being deported to Rwanda.

The government claimed the new policy, which attracted support from sections of opposition parties Labour and

Yesh Atid, was moral and conformed to internatio­nal law.

There is no certainty in Israel about how many foreign citizens are currently living without a legal permit.

An estimated 40,000 refugees from Sudan and Eritrea are claiming to be political asylum seekers, but the government insists they are work migrants.

The African migrants have been in the country for at least five years, arriving on foot through the Sinai Desert before a new border fence was completed in early 2013.

Most live packed into apartment blocks in the working-class neighbourh­oods in south Tel Aviv, where they find support from only from a few left-wing MPs and a handful of charities.

Israel has an agreement with Rwanda, which will accept migrants at $5,000 (£3,760) a head, concluded after an earlier agreement with Uganda fell through.

The few thousand migrants who have so far voluntaril­y agreed to go to Rwanda have each been given $2,000, but it is still unclear whether this arrangemen­t will hold for the tens of thousands still remaining.

Even if the Africans are all deported at a cost of a quarter of a billion US dollars, unknown numbers of migrants from the former Soviet Union will remain.

Immigratio­n experts believe there are much larger numbers of Russian, Ukrainian and Georgian citizens living illegally in Israel, but critics say they are less obtrusive because they are white African migrants protesting in 2014 outside Holot detention centre, which is due to be closed

and live among the Russian-speaking communitie­s around the country.

The closure of Holot comes as Israel confronts some of the most sweeping demographi­c changes in its history. With over eight million citizens, a relatively high birth-rate and an attractive quality of life, it is rapidly becoming comparable to many countries in Europe.

This has attracted migrants from

poorer parts of the world looking for a new life, but Israel remains a special case because it is locked in a complex demographi­c balance with the Palestinia­n population. There is no standard naturalisa­tion process in the country either, apart from the Law of Return that allows Jews and their family members to enter the country.

With unemployme­nt at an alltime low and Israeli business already

employing more than 50,000 Palestinia­n workers with daily work-permits, supporters believe the Israeli economy could easily absorb the African migrants.

But allowing the Africans to work legally in Israel would mean changing the country’s immigratio­n laws and opening an avenue for large numbers of non-Jews to move to Israel. For the moment, that remains a political taboo.

Rwanda will accept migrants at $5,000 a head

 ?? PHOTO: FLASH90 ??
PHOTO: FLASH90

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