Israel adopts new measures against African migrants
The Israeli cabinet approved Sunday measures aimed at
deporting thousands of Africans who illegally entered the country and who are
perceived by it as a threat to its Jewish character.
A statement from the prime minister's office said that
beyond the measures, which include a crackdown on employers and financial
incentives for home-bound Africans, the interior ministry has drafted a bill
that would enable to detain illegal migrants for one year without trial.
The new bill, which will be brought before parliament on
Monday for an initial hearing and vote, was formulated after a previous law
from 2012 allowing the three-year detainment without trial of illegals was
overturned by Israel's supreme court in September.
According to the statement, a "closed facility"
will serve as detention centre for migrants who manage to enter the Jewish
state, which has nearly finished the construction of a fence along its southern
border, as well as for those already in Israel "who disturb public
order".
"The new decisions include combined actions designed to
encourage illegal migrants to leave Israel and return to their countries of
origin, increase personal security for residents of Israel and reduce the
presence of migrants in city centres," the premier's office said.
According to the plan, law enforcement teams dealing with
African migrants will be increased by 550 new officers who will enforce laws
prohibiting their employment.
In addition, grants to "illegal migrants who leave
Israel" will increase from $1,500 to $3,500, the statement read.
"We are determined to deport the tens of thousands of
illegal migrants who are here after having reduced to zero the number of
illegal labour migrants who enter Israel's cities," Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu said in the statement.
"The steps that we unanimously approved today are
proportionate and necessary for maintaining the Jewish and democratic character
of the state," he said.
Human rights groups say that the majority of the African
migrants in Israel cannot be deported because of threats to their lives in
their homelands of Sudan and Eritrea.
In 2012, Israel launched a crackdown on what it said were
60,000 illegal immigrants from Africa, rounding up and deporting 3,920 by the
end of the year, and building a high-tech fence along the border with Egypt.
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