African migrants demonstrate in Jerusalem on April 4, 2018,
against Israeli Prime Minister's cancellation of an agreement with the
United Nations aimed at avoiding forced deportations. AFP PHOTO |
MENAHEM KAHANA
Israel on Wednesday released from detention a small group of
African migrants who had been
awaiting deportation after the collapse of an international deal to send them to Rwanda.
awaiting deportation after the collapse of an international deal to send them to Rwanda.
Some 200
additional migrants are still being held at the Saharonim detention
centre in southern Israel awaiting possible deportation to Uganda but
their fate depends on whether an Israeli envoy who visited the east
African state on Wednesday had managed to secure a deal for them to be
taken in.
In the event agreement is not reached, they
too will be freed, probably on Thursday. The long-term fate of the freed
migrants was unclear but Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said
he was seeking a new relocation deal, although he gave no details.
Netanyahu
said on Tuesday he was cancelling an agreement with the UN refugee
agency to relocate thousands of African migrants, bowing to right-wing
at home pressure to scrap the deal.
Netanyahu’s critics
seized on his backtracking on the arrangement - under which thousands
of other migrants would have won the right to remain in Israel - as a
sign of political weakness.
For the estimated 37,000
migrants in Israel, most of them from Eritrea and Sudan, the whirlwind
of announcements over the past three days about their future has swept
their status even deeper into limbo.
Western countries
On Monday,
Netanyahu announced the arrangement with the UNHCR that would have
relocated about 16,250 migrants to Western countries.
But
the fact that thousands more would be allowed to stay raised an outcry
from right-wing politicians and on social media from Netanyahu’s
nationalist voter base, which wants the migrants expelled.
He then announced he was putting the agreement’s implementation on hold and by Tuesday, he killed it.
The
58 migrants set free from Saharonim in the south of the country boarded
buses to Tel Aviv. They were freed because the state could not give
assurances to the Supreme Court that it had found a safe haven for them
abroad.
“I have been detained for six months and at
lunch time today the police came and told me I was being released, I
don’t know where I’ll go yet,” Musia Bara from Eritrea told Israel’s
Channel 1.
Demonstration
Several
hundred migrants held a demonstration in central Jerusalem later on
Wednesday demanding to be allowed to stay and for the forced
deportations to be stopped.
Eritrean Muluebrhan
Ghebrihiwet, 27, one of the demonstrators who has been in Israel for
almost seven years and who was released from detention last month, said
Israel’s government was playing mind games with the migrants.
“We
are grateful to the Israeli public for their support but the government
has waged a psychological war against us and they have done so because
of politics but we are refugees, human beings and we demand that they
stop,” he said.
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