Los Angeles Times

Israel is releasing detained migrants

Under a court ruling, 1,200 Africans are to be set free, but they have no place to go.

- By Batsheva Sobelman Sobelman is a special correspond­ent.

JERUSALEM — Israel on Tuesday began releasing about 1,200 African migrants from a remote desert detention facility after the Supreme Court overturned legislatio­n allowing them to be held without charges for up to 20 months.

Nearly 600 people, who had been held at the Holot detention facility in southern Israel for more than a year, were sent on their way with sandwiches and $ 16 for bus fare. But they were prohibited from going to Eilat or TelAviv, two cities with large African communitie­s and many Israeli residents who bitterly resent their presence.

Other cities also are not eager to welcome the migrants. The mayor of Arad said Tuesday that he had ordered inspection­s to keep migrants away from the desert city, which is also home to a large community of foreign workers in part because of its proximity to jobs at hotels and farms around the Dead Sea.

“I have nowhere to go now,” a 28- year- old Sudanese migrant, who gave his name only as Faisal, told reporters outside Holot. “I am glad to be out; this is a very important step. But it is just the first one. Where will I go and how far can I get with $ 16?”

Israel has been grappling with an influx of African migrants and asylum seekers that the country does not want but cannot return to their countries of origin. Most come from the strifetorn nations of Sudan and Eritrea, where they say their lives are at risk.

Tens of thousands of them have settled in the southern neighborho­ods of Tel Aviv, straining the already run- down infrastruc­ture of the blue- collar area, where Israeli neighbors blame them for increasing crime.

Fierce protests by some residents have made it a hot button political issue, with hawkish legislator­s pushing for tough new laws. The Supreme Court has three times thrown out legislatio­n allowing for the long- term incarcerat­ion of Africans who enter the country illegally.

The completion of a massive fence along Israel’s sprawling border with Egypt at the end of 2013 has largely stemmed the flow of people who were being smuggled across the Sinai Peninsula. However, an estimated 46,000 African migrants and asylum seekers are already in Israel.

Israeli officials say most of the migrants, whom they refer to as “infiltrato­rs,” are economic opportunis­ts. Only a few of the thousands of requests over the years have resulted in refugee status, activists say.

Human rights groups accuse the government of dragging its feet in reviewing asylum applicatio­ns and looking for ways to discourage Africans from staying, including making it extremely difficult for them to obtain work, housing and visas.

When Israel’s parliament returns from its summer recess, it will consider newlegisla­tion allowing for the repatriati­on of migrants to their countries of origin where possible or their removal to a third country, Interior Minister Silvan Shalom told Israel Radio on Tuesday.

If the tens of thousands of non- Jewish migrants are allowed to stay, Shalom said, their numbers woulds well to half a million within a generation, and “Israel’s Jewish character will be eroded beyond recognitio­n.”

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