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[dehai-news] Jpost.com: South Sudan issues complaint over deportations

From: Berhane Habtemariam <Berhane.Habtemariam_at_gmx.de_at_dehai.org>
Date: Thu, 28 Jun 2012 17:20:00 +0200

South Sudan issues complaint over deportations


By <http://www.jpost.com/Authors/AuthorPage.aspx?id=34> BEN HARTMAN,
<http://www.jpost.com/Authors/AuthorPage.aspx?id=163> YONI DAYAN

06/28/2012 17:53


Interior minister also announces Ivorians have 2 weeks to leave voluntarily
before forced deportation.


The South Sudanese government issued a formal complaint to the Foreign
Ministry this week, asking Israel to not refer to the repatriation of their
citizens as "deportations" and to refrain from photographing their expulsion
from the country, an official at the ministry confirmed on Thursday.

The official said that Juba requested such steps be taken "in order to
preserve the dignity of the South Sudanese" going through deportation,
adding that the complaint was not about the repatriation itself.

The official said that the complaint was based on "the process rather than
the substance of the deportations", and said that it is in keeping with
statements by the Prime Minister, who has stressed the need for the
deportations to be carried out with sensitivity.

The first round of deportations took place on June 17th and saw 123 South
Sudanese deported from Israel on a midnight flight to Juba. The deportations
were very highly-publicized and photographed, with dozens of cameramen on
scene at Ben-Gurion International Airport. Interior Minister Eli Yishai
stood in front of the South Sudanese families in the departure hall while
the South Sudanese were being processed and gave a press conference where he
vowed to work to rid Israel of all of the more than 65,000 illegal African
migrants living in the country. He also posed for pictures arm in arm with
South Sudanese deportees.

On Thursday, Yishai announced that migrants from the Ivory Coast will have
two weeks to leave Israel voluntarily or be deported by force.

"Infiltrators, starting now, will be thrown directly into jail", Yishai
said, adding that he insists that "the Eritrean and Sudanese migrants will
all eventually be thrown out of the country."

"You have two weeks to leave. Whoever does so will be eligible for a
subsidy. Whoever does not will be thrown out."

The Interior Minister also repeated a statement he has made in the past that
the situation in Eritrea, a dictatorship where the UN says human rights
abuses are widespread, is
<http://www.jpost.com/DiplomacyAndPolitics/www.jpost.com/DiplomacyAndPolitic
s/Article.aspx?id=275576> safer than the situation in the western Negev town
of Sderot, which is often the target of rocket fire from the Gaza Strip.

Yishai added that Israeli officials are in contact with counterparts in
Sudan and Eritrea to organize the deportation of migrants.

The number of Ivorians in Israel is estimated to be between a few hundred
and 2,000.

The Interior Ministry has said that any migrant who leaves of his or her own
free will receive $500 per adult and $100 per child. Those who do not do so
will be incarcerated and deported.

During the deportation of South Sudanese earlier this month, the Interior
Ministry offered the $1,300 as compensation for leaving voluntarily. The
ministry spokesman clarified that the discrepancy between the two offers was
unimportant and that they were not obligated to offer any sum at all.

"This is an important step to returning the migrants to their home
countries," Yishai said. "It also will help return a feeling of security to
[Israeli] residents."

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu met visiting Ivory Coast President
Alassane Ouattara earlier this month, agreeing on a plan to repatriate Ivory
Coast nationals who arrived in Israel without permission.

While up until the middle of last year it was impossible to deport Ivorians
because the country was in the throes of civil violence, that situation has
changed since Ouattara came to power in April.

Now, according to diplomatic officials, Ouattara's government is interested
in its citizens returning from various locations around the world because it
will signal that stability has returned to the country.

Israel has carried out arrests of Ivorians in the past, but not in the large
scale sense that arrests of South Sudanese have been carried out recently.

A petition against the deportation of Ivorians was overruled earlier this
month.

Also this week, PIBA announced that while they have so far deported 280
South Sudanese this month, a further 800 African migrants have crossed into
Israel illegally across the

Egyptian border. PIBA added that because the 'infiltrators law' went into
effect earlier this month, all 800 have been jailed.

Herb Keinon contributed to this report.

 
Received on Thu Jun 28 2012 - 14:36:48 EDT
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