The Jewish Chronicle

Israeli plans to deport African migrants falter

- BY ANSHEL PFEFFER IN JERUSALEM

ISRAEL’S PROPOSAL to expel thousands of migrants originatin­g from Africa appeared to hit a roadblock when it emerged prisons lack the capacity to incarcerat­e those who refuse to leave.

The controvers­ial plan to offer $3,500 (£2,588) in cash to each of the estimated 35,000 African migrants in return for voluntaril­y leaving the country was approved by the cabinet last week.

Those who take the deal would be sent to Rwanda, irrespecti­ve of whether it is their home country, while anyone who refuses will face an indefinite jail term.

Rwanda will reportedly receive $5,000 (£3,700) for each migrant it accepts.

But with thousands expected to turn the offer down, it has emerged that the government did not consider capacity in Israel’s overcrowde­d prisons.

“The plan was formulated without coordinati­on with us and there is no way we could handle the thousands of indefinite arrests it will entail,” a prison service source said on Wednesday.

There are two centres for African migrants in the Negev desert — Saharonim, classified as a prison facility, and Holot, an “open” facility. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu instructed the National Security Council to examine the option of “forcible deportatio­ns”, but it is legally problemati­c to force a person to board a plane against their will.

Refugee rights organisati­ons say there are no clear assurances that the deportees will be adequately treated once they land in Rwanda, despite statements from the country’s government.

They also claim that Israel has effectivel­y ignored the requests for political asylum by over 14,000 of the migrants, who are overwhelmi­ngly from Eritrea and Sudan.

“There hasn’t been an honest effort to comply with the terms of the internatio­nal convention on the status of the refugees, which Israel was not only one of the first countries to sign [but] played a major role in drafting,” said Jean-Marc Liling, executive director of the Center for Internatio­nal Migration and Integratio­n.

Over 50,000 African migrants arrived in Israel until 2012, when a new border fence with Egypt cut off smuggling routes from Sinai.

Mr Netanyahu has made their deportatio­n a personal crusade in recent months. The policy is popular with his base.

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