It is important to highlight that Israeli authorities have started the distribution of revised identification cards to those affiliated with the PFDJ terrorist organization, prominently including the phrase "not authorized to work."


almaze wrote: ↑14 Sep 2023, 15:01Anyone found to have employed these criminals faces severe penalties. Israel asserts that it would prefer if these individuals returned voluntarily to Eritrea, where the perpetrators regard their country as a paradise.
It is important to highlight that Israeli authorities have started the distribution of revised identification cards to those affiliated with the PFDJ terrorist organization, prominently including the phrase "not authorized to work."
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said Tali Ehrenthal, executive director of Aid Organization for Refugees and Asylum Seekers in Israel, also known as ASSAF.It seems that officials in the government were just waiting for an opportunity to start a wild campaign against Eritrean refugees and the asylum-seeker community as a whole,
Israel’s Eritrean community, which numbers around 17,000, is made up predominantly of low-wage workers, many of them asylum seekers who fled the autocracy under Afwerki and now live in precarity. Since 2001, Israel has maintained a policy of giving Eritreans “temporary protection” status to shield them from deportation back to Eritrea’s repressive rule. However, the Israeli right, which is now in power, has long tried to target the community, which it characterizes as one of “illegal infiltrators.” The recent crackdown on Eritrean migrants is an escalation in the right’s years-long anti-migrant campaign which seeks to protect Israel’s Jewish majority. In 2012, former Interior Minister Eli Yishai told https://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,734 ... 40,00.html the Israeli outlet Ynet that undocumented migrants posed a threat to the “Zionist dream,” adding thatThere is a sense that [the government] is trying to pave the way for a fatal violation of [asylum-seekers’] human rights and prepare public opinion for additional legislative initiatives that will hurt the community and put them at risk.
In recent years, Israeli authorities have built detention centers https://www.972mag.com/photo-diary-insi ... m-seekers/ for asylum-seekers and attempted to jail them for years or even indefinitely without trial, though laws permitting such detention were ultimately struck down by the Supreme Court. (Currently, Israeli authorities can detain https://www.unhcr.org/il/wp-content/upl ... 18-ENG.pdf someone who entered without authorization for up to three months.)until I can deport them, I’ll lock them up to make their lives miserable.
said Halefom Sultan, an Eritrean asylum-seeker and activist living in Israel.Israeli policy makes it very hard for the asylum seekers here, and [anti-Afwerki] Eritreans have no option,
Many of Israel’s anti-migrant policies were implemented to discourage immigration after the large influx of African asylum-seekers into the country since 2005.The only option is to live with the situation [of legal precarity], even if it means going to prison.
Sigal Rosen, public policy coordinator for the Hotline for Refugees and Migrants, told Jewish Currents.It doesn’t matter what kind of government coalition there is; the ministers in charge always prefer Jewish demography over the Jewish values of accepting these people and protecting them,
said Rosen.The wall was built due to the demographic fear expressed by several decision makers that millions of ‘infiltrators’ will come if there is no wall,
said Ehrenthal.No democratic country in the world has adopted such a cruel and illegal concept,
Amjad Iraqi, a senior editor at +972 Magazine, said Israel’s treatment of Eritreans is continuous with how Israel’s system of apartheid discriminates against non-Jews.The core ambition is to make the executive branch—the Population and Immigration Authority—all-powerful, and to allow it to trample, without any restraint, the rights of anyone who does not hold Israeli citizenship.
he said, noting that discriminating against African migrantsWhile apartheid is primarily targeting Palestinians, non-Jews in general are excluded from the Israeli Jewish political community,
Even Israeli officials have gestured to the parallel between the Eritrean community and Palestinians, with one law enforcement official telling Haaretz that the unrest at the Eritrean embassy in Tel Aviv wasfits naturally into Israel’s apartheid logic.
Tamara Newman, the director of international relations for the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, told Jewish Currents that the comparison is revealing because Israeli policethe kind of [scene] you only see in the West Bank.
Indeed, this was the first time live fire has been used on protesters inside the Green Line since October 2000, when police gunned down 12 Palestinian citizens of Israel (and one Palestinian from Gaza) for demonstrating against Israel’s violent response to the beginning of the Second Intifada.responded like they do in the West Bank [by] using live fire on a population that has little to no rights and is an oppressed population.
Israeli police explained https://apnews.com/article/israel-eritr ... b1b31d7a62 their use of live fire by claiming that their lives were at risk, and an estimated 50 officers were indeed injured, sustaining bruises from stones and other blunt objects. But Newman said that while some of the demonstrators had been violent—one Eritrean was even arrested for carrying a pistol—police lives were not at risk, and that the police responsewould never use live fire on Israeli Jews protesting in Tel Aviv.
Iraqi agreed, adding that the use of disproportionate force on non-Jews was common in Israel.was completely disproportionate.
he said.The psychology of Israeli police officers is rooted in a hierarchy that determines who can be targeted. If it’s a Palestinian, or a brown or Black person, that means they can exercise much more brutal force,
When you have that psychological worldview, it enables the cops to do what they did to the Eritreans. This is the racism that is inherent to how they police.