Israel rolls out, then pulls migrant pact
JERUSALEM — Israel on Monday canceled the planned expulsions of tens of thousands of African migrants, saying it reached a deal with the United Nations to resettle half of them in Western nations and allow the rest to remain in the country, only to suspend the deal hours later.
The announcement offered a solution to an issue that has divided Israel for the past decade, and scrapped a plan that had been widely maligned at home and abroad, even by some of Israel’s closest supporters.
“It’s a good agreement,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told reporters. “It enables us to solve this problem in a way that serves, protects the interests of the state of Israel and gives a solution to the residents of southern Tel Aviv and other neighborhoods, and also for the people who came into Israel.”
But in a Facebook post, Netanyahu said he will discuss the deal with Israeli residents of south Tel Aviv today. He added that in the meantime, “I am suspending the implementation of the agreement, and after meeting with the representatives I will re-examine the agreement again.”
Israel is home to roughly 35,000 African migrants, most of them from Eritrea, which has one of the world’s worst human-rights records, or wartorn Sudan. The migrants say they are asylum seekers fleeing danger and persecution, while Israeli leaders have claimed they are mostly job seekers.
The Africans started arriving in 2005, after neighboring Egypt violently quashed a refugee demonstration and word spread of safety and job opportunities in Israel.
Tens of thousands crossed the porous desert border before Israel completed a barrier in 2012 that stopped the influx. But Israel has struggled with what to do with those already in the country, alternating between plans to deport them and offering them menial jobs in hotels and local municipalities.
Thousands of the migrants concentrated in poor neighborhoods in south Tel Aviv, an area that has become known as “Little Africa.” Their presence has sparked tensions with working-class Jewish residents, who have complained of rising crime and pressed the government to take action.
But the migrants also found wide pockets of support, with many Israelis arguing that the country, founded in the wake of the Holocaust, had a special responsibility to help those in need.
Groups of Israeli doctors, academics, poets, Holocaust survivors, rabbis and pilots had also objected to the planned expulsion.
Critics at home and in the Jewish-American community had called the government’s deportation plans unethical and a stain on Israel’s image as a refuge for Jewish migrants.
Over the years, Israel had threatened migrants with prison, placed them in a now-shuttered desert detention camp and tried to persuade them to leave by offering them money and a one-way ticket to Africa. After those options failed, it announced plans to begin deporting them to an unnamed African country — believed to be Rwanda or Uganda — on Sunday.
Netanyahu said the plan was scrapped after it became clear that the “third country,” which he did not identify, could not handle the influx. He described Monday’s compromise as the best available option.
Migrants who had earlier agreed to return to Africa had reported abuses and broken promises after arriving in Rwanda. In some cases, their travel papers were confiscated or they were quickly sent to Uganda. Both Rwanda and Uganda had denied having any agreement with Israel.
Meir Ben-Shabbat, Netanyahu’s national security adviser, said the plan would be carried out in three phases over five years. He said the deal would apply only to migrants currently in Israel.
In all, the U.N. will resettle about 16,250 people, while Israel will absorb the same number. “A committee will be formed in order to identify them and find agreed solutions,” Ben-Shabbat said.
As part of the framework, Israel said it would invest in a plan to rehabilitate and develop affected neighborhoods in Tel Aviv, while also resettling African migrants elsewhere in the country.
Monim Haroon, a 28-yearold university student in Jerusalem who fled Darfur five years ago, said he was relieved to hear that a solution had been found and that he would be able to stay in Israel without worry.
“As asylum seekers we don’t care where we are going to be as long as it is a safe place, and these countries are willing to protect us and we can live with human dignity,” he said.
In a joint statement, a group of Israeli rights organizations praised Monday’s agreement and vowed to monitor it to make sure it is respected.
“We are extremely happy for the refugees,” said Sigal Rozen, of the Hotline for Refugees and Migrants. “We really hope that the Israeli government will stop abusing them and will respect their rights as refugees.”
Not everyone was pleased. Cabinet Minister Naftali Bennett, leader of the nationalist Jewish Home party, said the deal turned Israel into a “paradise for infiltrators.” He called for the plan to be brought to the Cabinet for a vote.