Photo: Tamar Dressler/IRIN. African refugees at an Israeli camp
Source: IRIN
TEL AVIV, 11 March 2013 (IRIN) - Testimonies of jailed Eritrean migrants
and asylum seekers (collected by a local NGO) say officials at
Saharonim prison in Israel’s Southern Negev desert are coercing them to
sign “voluntary repatriation” forms.
In one of the many testimonies a 28-year-old Eritrean detainee reported
being repeatedly visited by a translator telling her to accept
deportation to a third country (Uganda).
“He said we would not be free from the prison and we can only go to
Uganda or Eritrea. I was frustrated and depressed. I do not want to go
to Uganda. Today they called me and gave me a handwritten form in
Tigrinya which said: `I came from Eritrea to Israel illegally and now I
want to go to Uganda voluntarily. To do this I would like the Eritrean
embassy to issue me a passport and all the necessary documents.’ They
asked me to sign it and wanted to take my picture on video. I refused.”
Israel is a signatory to the 1951 Refugee Convention but does not
recognize Eritreans as refugees, although it does not officially deport
Eritreans and allows them to stay in Israel under a group defence
(temporary group protection).
Staff at the Hotline for Migrant Workers,
who collected the testimonies, say the government is forcibly trying to
repatriate Eritreans: “These people have no access to a refugee status
determination process, they are detained under the new amendment to the
infiltration law that came into effect in June 2012, which allows
detention of `infiltrators’ for an unlimited amount of time; now they
are told they will never be allowed to leave the prison and their only
option is to go back to Uganda/Eritrea. How can this be considered
voluntary?” one staff member told IRIN.
The UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) representative in Israel, William Tall,
told IRIN the Ministry of Interior made an attempt to offer relocation
to some 23 Eritreans to Uganda but without any result so far.
At the end of February he told Israeli newspaper Ha'aretz there was nothing voluntary about this process.
One Eritrean, Tesfamihret Habtemariam, was reportedly deported from
Israel earlier this month and is now in detention at Cairo airport after
five years in Israel, and may be returned to Eritrea.
UNHCR advises against repatriating Eritrean nationals because of the
likelihood of their being punished on return to their country.
Israel’s stance
Under an updated Anti-Infiltration law passed in January 2012, all
illegal border crossers are labelled “infiltrators” and can be detained
for up to three years.
The Eritreans being held in detention camps in the south are generally
not notified about their right to claim asylum or given the application
forms needed to do this, report NGOs.
On 18 February, official documents from the Israeli assembly, the
Knesset, quote Interior Minister Eli Yishai saying deportations (by
definition forced) were not yet taking place.
He said more than a 1,000 nationals of northern Sudan and Eritrea had
already left voluntarily and said he hoped a lot more would decide to
leave.
“And if it won't be voluntary leave, it will be involuntary - to their
country or to a different third country, and there is still no third
country to sign an agreement with, but I hope we do find other third
countries that we'll have an agreement with, and we can transfer the
infiltrators from here, from the Land of Israel, to their country or to
another country, whether it is done willingly or not.”
Last week the Israel’s Attorney-General Yehuda Weinstein sent a letter
widely reported in the local press to the director of the Interior
Ministry’s Population, Immigration and Border Authority, Amnon Ben Ami,
saying that under no circumstances should Eritrean nationals in Israeli
custody be sent “to any destination outside Israel’s borders” until he
(Weinstein) further clarifies these legal issues.