People from Eritrea and Sudan make up a significant number of migrants in Israel

 

Eritreans protested when the Israeli government first announced it

The Israeli authorities have jailed 16 Eritrean asylum seekers after they refused to be deported to Rwanda.

These are the first asylum seekers to be indefinitely detained under Israel’s mass deportation plan of Eritrean and Sudanese nationals to Rwanda and Uganda.

Some 600 asylum seekers have been handed deportation notices so far, with some 35,000 asylum seekers at risk of being affected, reports the Israeli refugee rights organisation the Hotline for Refugees and Migrants.

The asylum seekers were picked up from the Holot detention centre, where some people have started a hunger strike.

The Israeli government issued a notice to thousands of African migrants in January to leave the country or face imprisonment.

The government promised the migrants up to $3,500 (£2,600) for leaving within 90 days.

Earlier this month, the Israeli government decided they would give asylum specifically to Eritreans who deserted the army.

SOURCE    –      BBC

 

Israel jails first asylum seekers refusing deportation

Israel has jailed seven Eritrean asylum seekers after they refused to be deported to Rwanda, human rights groups say.

Protests against Israel's plan to deport asylum seekers have been held around the world [File: Ariel Schalit/AP]
Protests against Israel’s plan to deport asylum seekers have been held around the world [File: Ariel Schalit/AP]

Seven Eritrean asylum seekers have been transferred to an Israeli prison indefinitely after refusing to be deported to Rwanda, Israeli human rights groups reported.

The asylum seekers are the first to be placed in indefinite detention since the Israeli government announced it would force tens of thousands of African migrants to choose between deportation to a third country or incarceration for an unspecified length of time.

“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,” the Hotline for Refugees and Migrants and ASSAF, two Tel Aviv-based refugee rights groups, said in a statement on Wednesday.

Two of the seven asylum seekers detained at the Saharonim prison in southern Israel on Tuesday are survivors of torture, the organisations said.

Rallies against Israel’s refugee removal plan expected

Meanwhile, hundreds of asylum seekers began a hunger strike late Tuesday in the Holot detention centre to protest the imprisonment of the seven Eritreans, Israeli media reported.

600 deportation notices

There are about 27,000 Eritrean and 7,700 Sudanese asylum seekers in Israel, the UN refugee agency (UNHCR) said.

In November last year, the Israeli government announced plans to deport the remaining asylum seekers, without their consent.

Israel has issued deportation notices to about 600 people to date, the human rights groups said.

The third countries expected to take in the deportees are widely thought to be Rwanda and Uganda, Israeli media have reported, though both African countries have denied making formal deals with the Israeli government.

“It is mind boggling that Uganda and Rwanda agree to take part in this deportation plan and enable Israel to treat African asylum seekers – some of them fleeing from genocide and dictatorship – in this manner,” the rights groups said.

In January, the UNHCR urged Israel to reconsider its deportation plan. It said at least 80 asylum seekers deported by Israel between 2015 and 2017 “risked their lives by taking dangerous onward journeys to Europe”.

Along the way, “they suffered abuse, torture and extortion before risking their lives once again by crossing the Mediterranean to Italy”, said William Spindler, a UNHCR spokesman.

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SOURCE: Al Jazeera News