distressing and worrying development is unfolding in our Negev, far
from the State's decision-making centers. Every night some 40 to 50
African refugees cross the Israeli-Egyptian border; they raise their
hands and turn themselves in to the Israeli forces. According to IDF
data, from the beginning of the year up until last week some 12,000
refugees and labor seekers from various African countries came through
the Egyptian border and the quota is growing daily.
Israeli troops, generally sensitive reserve soldiers, check the
refugees to ascertain they are not terrorists and then they take their
"guests" into the military base. They provide them with showers, food
and water, diapers, baby formula, and basic medicine for those in need.
After a few hours the refugees are loaded onto trucks and transported
to the Emek Sara industrial zone on the outskirts of Beer Sheba where
they are left to their fate.
Seeking help
From Darfur to Eilat: Refugees' new life / Tamar Dressler
About 400 Sudanese refugees who crossed border into Israel from Egypt
are working in Dead Sea and Eilat hotels, while 170 of them, including
40 toddlers, live in southern Kibbutz Eilot. Due to lack of official
policy on refugee problem, hotels and kibbutzim turn into improvised
absorption agencies
The IDF claims – and justifiably so according to its point of view –
that it is not its duty to care for refugees entering Israel under
tragic circumstances. Therefore, the military generally abandons the
refugees on the doorstep of the southern district police headquarters.
The southern command states: "The majority of these infiltrators are
illegal residents by definition and not war refugees from Sudan, hence
it is the duty of the immigration police to absorb them and care for
them."
The southern district police maintain – which is also justified – that
there is no point in placing the problem of these refugees at its
doorstep, as a government decision on the matter has yet to be made.
Moreover, there is no point in apprehending these refugees: All the
prisons are filled to capacity anyway, and there is nowhere to deport
them to.
Thirdly, the Be'er Sheva municipality maintains – which is also
justified – that it is willing and able to provide immediate care to a
small amount of refugees arriving within its jurisdiction, but not to
hundreds or thousands of people - certainly not without substantial
government assistance.
This is where the main question arises: Where is the Israeli
government? Why has the prime minister not appointed a team of experts
to handle this matter during all these months? A team that would
examine all aspects of the problem and provide a reasonable solution
that would be assigned to the army, the police and the local
authorities in the area. For whom and why are we waiting?
Senior officials in the southern command and the southern district
police headquarters are asking – almost begging – that we bring the
issue, with all its severity, to the public discourse. "Someone up
there in the government has to come to his senses and to formulate an
agreed and logical policy. It doesn't make sense that a reserve
regiment commander would have to make a decision with such
international implications," they say.
And meanwhile, in billionaire vbusinessman Arcadi Gaydamak's land,
where there is no government, other elements are coming in and offering
their wares: This week humanitarian sources began - along with the
Islamic movement in the south – to plan the building of a tent city for
the African refugees flocking to the Negev. A referral to Gaydamak, of
course, is just a matter of time.
Original
Source
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African refugees seek refuge in the Negev; government yet to decide their fate
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