Israel set to deport aliens
According
to Israel’s Population and Migration Authority, officers arrested 45
migrants from South Sudan, along with three Nigerians, two Ghanaians,
two Chinese, one from Cote d’Ivoire, one from the Philippines and one
whose nationality is being checked.
In at least two cases, women
with young children were picked up as they walked down the street during
early morning swoops in the Red Sea resort town of Eilat, public radio
reported.
Rights activists said migrants were being picked up
across the town – at cashpoints, at their workplaces as well as through
door-to-door searches.
“The people arrested were taken on buses to
detention centres. Their mobile phones were confiscated,” journalist
and activist, Toni Lissi, told army radio.
“Other immigrants are hiding in their homes, not daring to go out until things calm down,” she said.
Interior
Minister Eli Yishai said the detainees would initially be held at the
Saharonim detention centre in the southern Negev desert, which has room
for 2,000 inmates.
“It’s a decent place with all essential
facilities,” he told public radio, referring to the centre, which lies
close to the Egyptian border, which was first opened in 2007.
“We’ll
put them in there and towards next week, we’ll bring a (chartered)
plane – I hope we’ll be able to organise more than one – in coordination
with the South Sudanese government.”
Yishai denied he was
fuelling growing public discontent over the issue of immigration, which
boiled over last month when a 1,000-strong protest against the rising
number of Africans in Israel turned violent, with demonstrators smashing
African-run shops and property, chanting “Blacks out!”
“It’s not
easy for me. I don’t enjoy the task,” said Yishai who frequently tried
to expel non-Jewish immigrants, sparking accusations of racism. “I don’t
do from xenophobia but from love of my people,“ he added.
Last
week, an Israeli court decided the lives of an estimated 1,500 South
Sudanese were no longer at risk in their homeland, clearing the way for
their mass expulsion.
Community workers said they were led to
understand the migrants would have at least a week to put their affairs
in order and volunteer for repatriation, but arrests began before dawn
on Sunday, when eight South Sudanese and 17 others were taken into
custody.
On Sunday, Israel’s Haaretz newspaper said a government
committee on legislation had approved a draft bill, which would raise
the maximum penalty for Israelis who employed, housed or transported
illegal immigrants to five years behind bars, compared with the current
two years.
MPs are expected to vote on the bill at a preliminary reading later this week.
Interior ministry figures show around 60,000 Africans are living in Israel illegally.
Some are refugees fleeing persecution in their home nations, but others are economic migrants.
Police
arrested 20 people immediately after last month’s riot in south Tel
Aviv, and since then, there have been several other attacks on
immigrants, including the fire bombing of an apartment in Jerusalem last
week, which lightly injured four Eritreans.
The riots sparked
shock in Israel, but also prompted top-level calls for the immediate
arrest and expulsion of tens of thousands of African migrants, most of
whom come from Sudan, South Sudan and Eritrea.
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