Showing posts with label Empire Files. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Empire Files. Show all posts

26 February 2018

20,000 Demonstrate in Tel Aviv Against the Deportation of African Asylum Seekers

In the world's most racist state, Two out of every Three Israelis Support the Deportation of Black African Refugees

The anti-deportation protest in Tel Aviv on February 24, 2018. (Courtesy)
In what was an impressive demonstration, 20,000 people – refugees and Israelis – demonstrated on Saturday in Tel Aviv.  The equivalent size in Britain for such a demonstration would be about 200,000.

Nonetheless opinion polls in Israel show that about two in every three Israelis, in what is the most racist state in the world, support the attempts by Netanyahu and the government to deport the asylum seekers.

To date just 11 asylum seekers have been granted refugee status.  Compare this with some 90% success for Eritrean refugees in Europe.  Israel is simply refusing to process asylum applications.  Last week a court held that those who had escaped from the Eritrean army were entitled to refugee status.

Meanwhile Israel has begun to gaol refugees who refuse to accept deportation although it seems that the Israeli prison service, which is full with Palestinian prisoners, cannot cope with such a huge influx.

Below is an excellent video from Abby Martin on the anti-Black racism in Israel’s Jewish supremacist state.

It is surprising that the Jewish Labour Movement and Labour Friends of Israel, who are so concerned about non-existent 'anti-semitism' in the Labour Party, have yet to condemn this racist attempt to deport refugees in order to safeguard Israel's Jewish majority and the support of the Israeli Labour Party for Netanyahu by their 'sister' party in Israel.

Tony Greenstein


Empire Files: Anti-Black Racism Reveals Israel’s White Supremacy


see also



Israelis and refugees come together in Tel Aviv to demonstrate against the government policy jailing those who refuse to leave the country
Ilan Lior
Feb 24, 2018 

Around 20,000 Israelis gathered alongside African asylum seekers in Tel Aviv to protest against the Israeli government's policy of deportations and imprisonment of the asylum seekers.

The protest took place in south Tel Aviv, where most of the city's asylum seekers live, and local residents have long complained about their presence there.

Protesters carried signs reading, "No to deportation," "We're all humans" and "Refugees and residents refuse to be enemies."
Israelis and African asylum seekers protest against deportations and imprisonment, Tel Aviv, February 24, 2018.Meged Gozani
Togod Omer Adam, an asylum seeker from Sudan, spoke at the protest. "We did not choose to come here to south Tel Aviv. When people arrive at the border [between Israel and Egypt], they give you a one-way ticket to the central bus station in Tel Aviv."

He said that he understands the difficult situation this has created in south Tel Aviv, saying, "We are all victims in this story – the older Israelis residents and we, the asylum seekers. We all live here and for so long they have tried to make us fear one another."

Earlier this week, Israel began jailing citizens of African countries for refusing to leave of their own accord.
Israelis and African asylum seekers protest against deportations and imprisonment, Tel Aviv, February 24, 2018.Meged Gozani
On Tuesday night, all asylum seekers at the Holot detention center began a hunger strike in response. Earlier in the day, seven Eritreans who held at Holot were summoned for pre-deportation hearings. After they refused to leave the country for either Eritrea or Rwanda, they were immediately transported to Saharonim Prison, apparently due to fear they would flee.

Two of the men survived torture in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula en route Israel, but their asylum requests were denied.

In line with new rules issued by the Interior Ministry’s Population, Immigration and Border Authority, they will be held at Saharonim indefinitely unless they change their minds.
African asylum seekers prepare for Saturday night's demonstration against deportations and imprisonment, Tel Aviv, February 24, 2108.
African asylum seekers prepare for Saturday night's demonstration against deportations and imprisonment, Tel Aviv, February 24, 2018.Meged Gozani
Hundreds of asylum seekers marched from Holot to Saharonim on Thursday in protest of the government's policies.

15,000 protest deportation of asylum seekers in Tel Aviv

Among the slogans: "Money for the neighborhoods — not for another Holot [Detention Center]" and "No expulsion, no Holot — rebuild the neighborhoods."


By MAARIV ONLINE
February 24, 2018 21:45

Some 15,000 demonstrators protested the expulsion of mostly Eritrean and Sudanese asylum seekers and migrant workers, many of whom were present at the protest, from Israel. The demonstration was organized by Residents of South Tel Aviv Against Deportation and led by Shula Keshet, a resident of the Neve Sha'anan neighborhood in South Tel Aviv.

Among the slogans were "Money for the neighborhoods — not for another Holot [Detention Center]" and "No expulsion, no Holot — rebuild the neighborhoods."
Israeli detention centre
Israel's migrant deportation plays on Jewish 'moral compass' February 6, 2018 (Reuters)
"I stand here shouting a scream that echoed a wound, rage and protest against the constant and longstanding abuse of the residents of South Tel Aviv," Keshet said. "Of trafficking drugs and trafficking women, into a crowded ghetto by channeling tens of thousands of people, migrant workers and asylum seekers here, into a violent space."

Omar Adam, an asylum seeker from Sudan, had a message for his neighbors in South Tel Aviv.

"I want to say something straight to my neighbors from the Shapira neighborhood who are here today," he said. "I know you do not want to — I know that you do not want me to have a bad thing ... The people of South Tel Aviv who are here today know that what is being said in the media is not reality."


Eric Sumner translated this report.

Three residents of South Tel Aviv attending the anti-deportation protest in Tel Aviv on February 24, 2018. Their headbands read "against the deportation." (Courtesy)

26 January 2018

Abby Martin Meets Ahed Tamimi

Message From A Freedom Fighter They Destroy All Our Happiness 

A Child Speaks about the effects of Israel's Military Police State on her life

This is an excellent video from the redoubtable Abby Martin who specialises in making film giving the background to colonial struggles and their consequences today.

The tragedy of Palestinian children


This film gives the background to the struggle in Nabi Saleh, a small village in Area C of the West Bank and the role of the Tamimi family in particular.  This is a family which has been at the forefront of the struggle against first British colonialism and now Israeli settler colonialism.

The film, which has just been made, consists of film taken some years ago when Ahed, who is now in an Israeli prison for daring to stand up to a member of the herrenvolk’s military, was a young girl.  Despite her age her maturity shines through. 
the children make jewellery, like the necklace that Ahed is wearing, out of the bullets that the Israeli soldiers shoot at them
It is just less than 20 minutes and it is worth watching.  Below we see a report in Middle East Monitor of the response of the British government to what  has happened with the arrest of Ahed.  Given the pro-Zionist position of the present government it testifies to the depth of support for Ahed and revulsion at Israel’s behaviour.
A younger Ahed confronting the armed occupiers

British minister on Ahed Tamimi arrest: Israel soldiers ‘shouldn’t be there’
From the days of the British the Tamimis confronted colonialism 
January 10, 2018 at 10:55 am

The British government has responded to the arrest of Palestinian teen activist Ahed Tamimi saying that the Israeli occupation forces should not have been in Nabi Saleh in the first place.

In oral questions yesterday, Labour MP Julie Elliott asked Alistair Burt, minister of state for the Middle East at the Foreign & Commonwealth Office, whether he shared her “outrage” over the “continued detention of 16-year-old Ahed Tamimi”.


Elliott noted that Tamimi is being detained in an Israeli prison inside the Green Line, in violation of Article 76 of the Fourth Geneva Convention, which prohibits an occupying power from transferring prisoners outside of the occupied territory.

In response, Burt noted that he knows “both the Tamimi family and Nabi Saleh” personally, describing the incident as a “very unhappy” one.

The truth is that the soldiers should not be there and the young woman should not have needed to do what she did he added.

Burt confirmed that the British government has made representations to the Israeli authorities about Tamimi’s case.


Background to the struggle of Ahed and her family as told by her cousin, the world's youngest journalist, Janna Jihad, 11