Thousands protest in Israel against expulsion of African migrants

Thousands protest in Israel against expulsion of African migrants
Thousands of Israelis and migrants protested in Tel Aviv on Saturday against the government's plan to expel African migrants who arrived illegally.
2 min read
25 March, 2018
Protests have been held in Israel over the government's anti-migrant plan [File photo: Getty]

Thousands of people protested on Saturday in central Tel Aviv against Israel's plan to deport Eritreans and Sudanese who entered the country illegally.

More than 20,000 people - migrants and Israelis - took part in the rally, with footage broadcast live on the Ynet news website showing them chanting: "we are all human beings".

"There is no difference between their blood and our blood," chanted the demonstrators.

Israel's supreme court earlier this month suspended the controversial government plan to deport thousands of Eritrean and Sudanese migrants in response to a challenge from those opposed to the move.

The court said in its decision the state was given until March 26 to provide further information and the suspension on deporting them would remain in place until then.

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu in January said migrants who entered illegally have the choice of leaving voluntarily or facing indefinite imprisonment with eventual forced expulsion.

On Tuesday, he said an electronic fence along the Israel-Egypt border has saved the Jewish state from "severe (jihadist) attacks... and something much worse, a flood of illegal migrants from Africa".

The interior ministry says there are some 42,000 African migrants in Israel, mainly from Sudan and Eritrea.

Most of them began arriving in 2007, through the border with Egypt's Sinai Peninsula.

During Saturday's protest, Education Minister Naftali Bennett, head of the far-right Jewish Home party, appealed to the government in a tweet not to give in to those opposed to the deportations.

Describing the migrants as "the illegal infiltrators" who enter Israel in search of work, he said allowing them to stay would turn the country into "an employment agency for the entire world".