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African migrants are painting their faces white to stop Israel from deporting them

  

Category:  World News

Via:  johnrussell  •  6 years ago  •  3 comments

African migrants are painting their faces white to stop Israel from deporting them


African migrants are painting their faces white to stop Israel from deporting them

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In this Wednesday, Feb. 7, 2018 photo, African migrants gather during a protest in front of Rwanda embassy in Herzeliya, Israel. Tens of thousands of African asylum seekers, nearly all from dictatorial Eritrea and war-torn Sudan, fear their stay in Israel is coming to an abrupt end. The Israeli government has given them until April 1 to leave the country for an unnamed African destination -- known to be Rwanda -- in exchange for $3,500 and a plane ticket, or they will be incarcerated indefinitely.

Israel stayed true to its promise of arresting and expelling African migrants last week after it detained seven Eritreans who refused to be deported to Rwanda.

Two refugee rights groups, the Hotline for Refugees and Migrants and Aid Organization for Refugees and Asylums seekers in Israel (ASSAF), said authorities handed the asylum seekers “deportation notices” and imprisoned them at the Saharonim prison in the south of Israel.

To protest the deportation, inmates at the Holot prison in the Negev desert first embarked on a hunger strike . African migrants also went out into the streets, protesting in front of embassies like that of Rwanda, and hoping to pressure officials to end their expulsion. Some of those demonstrating also painted their faces white, suggesting they were being sent into danger because Israel didn’t believe their black lives mattered.

The current deportation plan threatens to remove thousands of Africans, many of them from Sudan and Eritrea. The United Nations refugee agency estimates there are 27,000 Eritreans and 7,700 Sudanese in Israel, who say they fled war, persecution, and conscription . Officials, however, call them “infiltrators” in search of economic opportunities, and who constitute a threat to Israel’s social fabric and Jewish identity.





Protesting in front of the Rwanda embassy in Herzeliya, Israel.


The government has proposed giving each migrant $3,500 to leave , with the option of going home or to a third country. If they don’t leave by end of March, migrants face indefinite incarceration. Immigration officials are also hiring civilian inspectors to help investigate and arrest the migrants.

Israel’s plan to return refugees has drawn criticism from human rights advocates both in and outside the country. Academics, activists, and prominent Israeli writers have called on prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu not to deport the asylum seekers, saying the nation has “no refugee problem.”




Tens of thousands of African asylum seekers have until April 1 to leave Isrel for an unnamed African destination in exchange for $3,500 and a plane ticket, or they will be incarcerated indefinitely.

Is their time in Israel up?


Rwanda, where many of the migrants are being reportedly sent, recently said that it was “wrong and offensive” that asylum seekers were being given the option of going to Rwanda or to jail. Research has shown that those previously deported to Rwanda and Uganda continue to face danger and death, even risking their lives by taking perilous onward journeys to Europe.

Both Hotline and ASSAF criticized the recent arrests, noting that two of the detained Eritreans had their asylum requests denied even though they survived torture. “This is the first step in a what is a globally unprecedented deportation operation, a move tainted by racism and complete disregard for the life and dignity of asylum seekers.”

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JohnRussell
Professor Principal
1  seeder  JohnRussell    6 years ago

The current deportation plan threatens to remove thousands of Africans, many of them from Sudan and Eritrea. The United Nations refugee agency estimates there are 27,000 Eritreans and 7,700 Sudanese in Israel, who say they fled war, persecution, and conscription . Officials, however, call them “infiltrators” in search of economic opportunities, and who constitute a threat to Israel’s social fabric and Jewish identity.

 
 
 
Greg Jones
Professor Participates
1.1  Greg Jones  replied to  JohnRussell @1    6 years ago

Israel is too small a country to allow anymore troublemakers in. These people can go to any EU country who welcomes immigrants with open arms. They can go to Greece, or even China and Russia.

 
 
 
Jonathan P
Sophomore Silent
2  Jonathan P    6 years ago

I sympathize with anyone seeking asylum in a place that is a vast improvement over their current situation. That said, the article ignores 2 major points:

1)Israel is a geographically tiny country, whose citizens are experiencing vast population growth. There is a finite amount of room for the existing population, and this influx represents a material increase in population.

2)More irritating, the article ignores the fact that there are more than 22,000 Ukrainians with the same problem as these asylum seekers. They also stand to be deported, but because they are white, there doesn't seem to be any problem about that.

Finally, in this world, there is no shortage of insensitive "officials" who make disparaging remarks about people other than themselves. I would posit that they do not represent the view of the leadership, as it were. Surely, they are not saying the same thing about the 22,000 Ukrainians that stand to be deported.

 
 

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