Israel sends first plane of S.Sudanese back home (AFP) AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE) 06/17/12)
Source: http://uk.news.yahoo.com/israel-send-first-plane-sudanese-back-home-161003654.html;_ylt=Ag.r6lvv.gaL_CJnY0lC9K_YfMl_;_ylu=X3oDMTQxcGVudTFrBG1pdANUb3BTdG9yeSBNaWRkbGUgRWFzdFNTRgRwa2cDODdiOWJjNDAtYTU0MC0zZjVmLWE2NzItNTg4OTkxNjliODc5BHBvcwMxBHNlYwN0b3Bfc3Rvc
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A plane carrying 127 illegal immigrants took off for the South Sudan
capital of Juba, in the first wave of expulsions of tens of thousands
of Africans, the daily Maariv said on its website.
The first charter flight left Ben Gurion airport near Tel Aviv
overnight Monday carrying 127 men, women and children and was to
arrive in Juba some four hours later, Maariv said.
"They will be leaving here at midnight (2100 GMT Sunday)," Sabine
Hadad, spokeswoman for the Population and Migration Authority told
AFP earlier, saying the first plane was carrying South Sudanese who
had agreed to be voluntarily repatriated.
Over the past week, Israel has been conducting mass raids to round up
illegal immigrants, most of them Africans, with the aim of sending
them home.
"So far, more than 500 people have volunteered to leave, and 300
people have been arrested," Hadad said of the operation which began
at dawn on June 10.
The vast majority of them are from South Sudan.
Those who agreed to leave voluntarily have been promised a plane
ticket and a grant of 1,000 euros ($1,250) per adult or $500 (396
euros) per child, officials say.
By early evening, Terminal 1 was a hive of activity with hundreds of
people signing forms and receiving money before the late-night
flight, an AFP correspondent at the scene said.
Interior Minister Eli Yishai, who has vowed to rid Israel first of
all the illegal immigrants from South Sudan and the Ivory Coast, then
those from Eritrea and Sudan, was on hand at the airport to see them
off, the correspondent said.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said another plane would be
leaving "next week."
"Today, the government will begin the operation to repatriate illegal
work infiltrators to their countries of origin," he told ministers at
the weekly cabinet meeting. "We will do this in an orderly and
dignified manner."
Harel Locker, director general of Netanyahu´s office, said that over
the weekend, only 38 immigrants had crossed the border into Israel,
in what was "the lowest weekend figure in years."
"Our message that there is no work in Israel for infiltrators and
that they will no longer be taken to Tel Aviv but put in detention
for long periods, is getting through," he told public radio.
Israeli figures indicate there are some 60,000 Africans in the
country illegally, most of whom live in run-down neighbourhoods of
south Tel Aviv.
Only a tiny fraction of them are from South Sudan, with rights groups
putting their number at some 700, although Israeli officials say the
number is at least 1,500.
Until recently, the South Sudanese were shielded by an Israeli policy
giving them protection as a group from deportation.
But on June 7, a Jerusalem court overturned that long-standing
policy, ruling that they were no longer at risk in their homeland and
clearing the way for their mass expulsion.
Rising tensions over the growing number of illegal immigrants
exploded into violence last month when a protest in south Tel Aviv
turned ugly, with demonstrators smashing African-run shops and
property, chanting "Blacks out!"
Israel, which reportedly backed South Sudan through its 1983-2005 war
with Khartoum, recognised the new nation and established full
diplomatic relations with its government shortly after it declared
independence in July last year. (Copyright © 2012 Agence France
Presse. 06/17/12)
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