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Israeli government calls for mass deportation of African immigrants: Black Refugees Seeking Persecution from War

Israeli court clears deporting South Sudan migrants‎ [MORE

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In photo children cross the street as residents of south Tel Aviv carry Israeli flags during a protest against African migrants living in their neighbourhoods. “Get out of the neighbourhood,” was recently spray-painted on the wall of an apartment housing Eritrean migrants in Tel Aviv. [MORE] The number of Africans in the population is less than one per cent. [MOREFrom [HERE] Israel’s government has announced its plans to speed up the deportation of at least 25,000 African immigrants living illegally in the country. Human rights supporters have decried the move and branded the mass expulsion of migrants as “immoral.” Israel is a state founded by refugees. A law also came into effect on Sunday allowing Israeli authorities to detain illegal immigrants for up to three years without trial or deportation. Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu issued a statement to his ministers urging them to accelerate plans to expel immigrants from South Sudan, Cote d’Ivoire, Ghana and Ethiopia.

Human Rights organizations regard the new measure as a violation of the United Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees.

Plans are in place to deport over 700 immigrants in the coming days. Netanyahu’s government brands them as “infiltrators” and sees them as a threat to the Jewish demographic in the country.

The Israeli government cannot legally repatriate immigrants from Eritrea, Sudan and Somalia because their lives would be at risk upon their return. They make up around 35,000 of the 60,000 African immigrants currently living in Israel (less than 1% of the entire population).

"Whoever can be sent away should be sent away from here as quickly as possible," said Netanyahu on Sunday, adding that “it’s clear that we cannot return Sudanese and Eritreans to their countries.”

However, according to the new law any immigrants caught by the Israeli authorities without documents may be subject to the three-year sentence.

Many migrants who take refuge in Israel are fleeing from war or persecution in their countries of origin, but very few are granted official refugee status by the government. Many live on temporary visas and subsist on menial jobs.

African immigrants have become the target of many protests recently in Israeli society. They are blamed for rising crime and violence in the country.

All of the migrant workers caught by the Israeli authorities so far have been transferred to Saharonim detention center which has a capacity of 2,000 spaces. The Interior Ministry predicts the center will reach maximum capacity next month and a currently working on expanding it to accommodate 5,400.

A migrant home was torched on Sunday night, trapping 10 Eritrean migrant workers inside, two of whom were injured. Graffiti was found at the scene that read “leave the neighborhood,” raising suspicions of arson. [MORE