Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. FILE PHOTO | NMG
Jerusalem,
Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday suspended a resettlement
deal for African migrants faced with deportation, just hours after his
office had announced the agreement with the UN refugee agency.
"I've
decided to suspend implementation of this accord and to rethink the
terms of the accord," Netanyahu wrote on his Facebook page, saying his
move was in response to criticism of the deal.
Israel
had announced a deal with the UNHCR to cancel a controversial plan to
deport African migrants and replace it with one that would see thousands
sent to Western countries.
The new accord would at the same time allow
thousands more of the mainly Sudanese and Eritrean migrants to remain in
Israel at least temporarily.
Political issue
The
migrants have become a political issue, with religious and conservative
politicians portraying the presence of Muslim and Christian Africans as
a threat to Israel's Jewish character.
A
group of residents of southern Tel Aviv, where many of the migrants
have settled, immediately denounced the new plan in a statement, calling
it "a shame for the state of Israel".
Netanyahu said he would meet on Tuesday with residents of southern Tel Aviv.
Several
ministers also said they opposed the accord with the UNHCR, on which
they had not been informed before the announcement by Netanyahu's
office.
The deal announced by Netanyahu's office appeared to end the possibility that many would be forcibly deported.
Instead, it would see a minimum of 16,250 migrants resettled in Western nations including Canada, Germany and Italy.
"The
agreement stipulates that for each migrant who leaves the country, we
commit to give temporary residence status to another," Netanyahu himself
said in a televised address.
Unaware
Germany and Italy, however, said they were unaware of any such resettlement deal for African migrants from Israel.
Netanyahu
in January announced the implementation of a programme to remove
migrants who entered illegally, giving them a choice between leaving
voluntarily or facing indefinite imprisonment with eventual forced
expulsion.
According to interior
ministry figures, there are currently some 42,000 African migrants in
Israel, half of them children, women or men with families, who were not
facing immediate deportation.
As the
migrants could face danger or imprisonment if returned to their
homelands, Israel offered to relocate them to an unnamed African
country, which deportees and aid workers said was Rwanda or Uganda.
But
Netanyahu said that he had to abandon the initial plan because the
option of sending them to a third country "no longer exists".
Rwanda and Uganda have said they would not accept those deported against their will.
Migrants
began entering Israel through what was then a porous Egyptian border in
2007. The border has since been strengthened, all but ending illegal
crossings.
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