Israel to extradite 15,000 Sudanese asylum seekers

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By Toby Collins

October 5, 2012 (LONDON) - Israel’s interior minister Eli Yishai said
on Wednesday 15,000 Sudanese asylum seekers will be detained from
October 15, claiming they are not refugees; something which the UN
refugee agency (UNHCR) disputes.


South Sudan asylum seekers arrive in South Sudan after being sent home
by Israel (Reuters)
A group of human rights groups has submitted a petition to the Jewish
District Court describing the policy as an attempt to “make their
lives miserable” in order to impel them to return to Sudan.

Israel does not have an extradition treaty with Khartoum’s pro-Iran
government. The Sudanese asylum seekers must therefore leave Israel of
their own free will.

According to Hotline for Migrant Workers, those being detained include
genocide survivors from Darfur.

Eritrean asylum seekers are also to be deported. Asmara has already
stated that it does not want them back.

After the second intifada, when Israel began the construction of the
wall in the West Bank in 2000, work permits for Palestinians were
retracted. This created a deficit of cheap manual labour. A relaxing
of regulations for immigrants from other countries was Tel Aviv’s
solution.

Israel’s current political rhetoric suggests that asylum seekers and
more specifically those from Africa are perceived a threat to the
religious and cultural sovereignty of Israel.

Despite the animosity between Israel and Palestine more work permits
are now being granted to Palestinians, while efforts are made to
extradite Africans have increased. Despite the cross-border animosity,
Palestinians are clearly seen as less of a threat to the cultural
hegemony of Israel than Africans.

The political climate in Israel is currently conducive to racist
rhetoric; the global economic crisis is putting pressure upon Israel,
as it is with all the world’s countries, and inspires an climate of
culpability.

In Israel there are some conspicuous expenses being outlaid. This has
led people to recently take to the streets of Tel Aviv, to protest
about the hardship they are suffering while Orthodox Jews are given
state-backed accommodation and education.

The government then changed military service regulations to include,
amongst others, Orthodox Jews. However, this, as well as the attack
upon asylum seekers, is seen by many as spinning plates while
backstage, the economic fragility of the state is pondered.

Controversy surrounded Israel’s decision in August that 100 asylum
seekers with documentation proving their original nationality is
Sudanese, will be sent to South Sudan, with whom Israel has an
extradition treaty.

Why this is the right moment to make this shift in rhetoric is a
matter of dispute. However, globally pseudo-racist anti-immigration
rhetoric is en vogue; immigrants are the perfect scapegoat in an
economic crisis: see the current rise of fascist party in Greece.

(ST)

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