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Why are Eritreans in Israel accused of being ‘impolite’? – Jerusalem Post

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Currently, 42,147 asylum seekers live in Israel. Most entered through the Egyptian-Israeli border between 2006 and 2013. The majority are from Eritrea. During interviews I’ve held with workers in municipal institutions some of them complained about Eritreans being “impolite” and “not as quiet as other migrants.” Possibly this is a result of the government’s explicit intention to make the lives of asylum seekers unbearable, as former interior minister Eli Yishai explained Israeli policy as early as 2012.

Possibly it’s also because the story of Eritreans is not understood. Frustrating as it may be for Eritreans, their story is untypical for refugees, as we normally think of them. Eritrea does not have the sort of war currently taking place in Syria or which led many Sudanese to escape the Darfur genocide in 2003. This leads some to dismiss it.

Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked and former interior minister Silvan Shalom have both issued press releases in support of Eritrean President Isaias Afwerki’s regime. They have embarrassingly based their statements on meetings with Eritrea’s ambassador to Israel. The reality in Eritrea, however, is uniquely abhorrent.
On May 9 the UN Human Rights Council published a report on Eritrea. It concluded that crimes against humanity – namely, “enslavement, imprisonment, enforced disappearance, torture, other inhumane acts, persecution, rape and murder” – have apparently been being committed in Eritrea since the country broke away from Ethiopia and became independent in 1991.

They take place away from the capital, Asmara, behind the walls of detention facilities and military training camps.

Torture and rape are regularly employed against political dissenters, but also as arbitrary measurements as a means of deterrence. The report further maintains that “the façade of calm and normality that is apparent to the occasional visitor to the country, and others confined to sections of the capital, belies the consistent patterns of serious human rights violations.” Adding to the environment of persecution in the country, only four religious denominations are recognized, while members of other faiths are subject to systematic repression, along with discrimination against other minorities on ethnic grounds.

All of this is done in a country with an infamous law of indefinite conscription to the army, including for purposes of forced labor. A shoot-to-kill policy is enacted on the borders toward anyone attempting to flee military service, which frequently lasts for over a decade, including reserve duty for citizens as old as their seventies. Others apprehended are arrested and are subjected to torture and rape (both females and males) as part of investigation techniques or simply as a way of fostering fear among inmates.

The report concludes that the government of Eritrea is “not in a position to provide accountability for these crimes and violations.” It is an authoritarian state, with all power concentrated in the hands of the president and of a small circle of loyalists. The UN commission therefore recommends the Security Council refer the situation to the International Criminal Court and enforce sanctions on assets and movement of individuals complicit in international crimes.

Israel is not a member of the Security Council and so long as it doesn’t act, Israel too is greatly affected by the situation.

Last year fewer Eritreans applied for asylum in the whole of Europe than crossed into Israel via the Sinai Peninsula in the past decade. A recent report by the Knesset Information and Research Center speaks of almost half the residents of four south Tel Aviv neighborhoods coming from Eritrea.
Those “super diverse” areas, in the terms of Steven Vertovec, have a strained infrastructure: 75% of fires in the city occur in a couple of neighborhoods that are particularly overburdened; sidewalks are broken, sewage pipes flood over, roads are blocked, trash is piling up and parks require extra maintenance. These neighborhoods are not turned into complete slums thanks only to municipal efforts and resources, and despite government policy to make the lives of “infiltrators” (as it calls asylum seekers) ever harder.

In light of the horror of the Eritrean regime, the deportation and detention policies of the Israeli government to encourage a “voluntary” departure of Eritreans are particularly sinister. These policies punish those whom fate has punished already, but also end up removing the leadership of the migrant population, making it less independent and increasingly reliant upon social services that the city must provide at the local level to minimize the phenomenon of ghettos being formed and provide basic rights to individuals who reside its borders.

Actually, the government policies aimed at making the Eritrean population leave the country are not only immoral, but also counterproductive. For example, many Eritreans rightly seek to avoid detention and deportation by having children, even in their abject conditions in Israel: already now 12% of Tel Aviv’s children are of “foreign” background (born either to asylum seekers or labor migrants), and some clinics for pregnant women and young mothers cater to asylum seekers 90% of the time or more.

Given the grave situation in their country of origin and the permanent sense of temporariness that the Israeli government seeks to create, is it any wonder that some Eritreans end up being impatient and somewhat overwrought when standing in line to receive basic services from municipal institutions? A couple of weeks ago more than 2,000 Eritreans took to the streets – quite politely, actually. They demonstrated before the European Union embassy near Tel Aviv, calling for the adoption of the UN report, as well as for Israel to revise its relations with Eritrea accordingly.

For example, Israel can flag the issues of human rights violations in Eritrea in international institutions. Independently of what the Security Council or the International Criminal Court end up doing, Israel – having full diplomatic relations with Eritrea – could assist it in reforming its legislative, judicial and security sector, as suggested in the UN report. Netanyahu could even capitalize on strengthened ties with African states following his historical trip to the continent last week to do that.

Finally, Israel could follow the report’s recommendation and “provide Eritrean nationals seeking protection with refugee status.” Since Israel’s border with Egypt has been sealed since 2013, there is only a limited Eritrean population in the country. Settling their status would help municipalities, schools, hospitals and clinics work better, and help disperse the high concentration of asylum seekers in Tel Aviv to other areas in the country. Most importantly, ending the perpetual uncertainty and unending ordeal of Eritreans in Israel is a moral imperative. Once the world starts treating them fairly, who knows? They may even say thank you.

The author is a PhD candidate at Goethe University in Frankfurt, Germany.

aseye.asena@gmail.com

Review overview
20 COMMENTS
  • k.tewolde July 12, 2016

    It hurts the Eritrean story to be told this way,once proud and tall people are becoming the new global gypsies,pretty much you can find one today in a detention center,under a bridge,sleeping on a bus bench,in a soup kitchen or peddling for a change in a street corner.How did we end up this way? Who is responsible?And why? The irony is we haven’t come up with a collective answer to these questions.yet,So our identity slowly fades like old jeans in front of our eyes,our memories fade,our country of origin becomes remote,we are morphing into an alien with no roots…..like I said before, somebody knows exactly what they are doing, the rest spend their time bickering.,before you know it the Indians end up in a reservation.

    • Tekeste July 13, 2016

      k.tewolde, you are not making much sense really and what do you really mean by ‘before you know it the Indians end up in a reservation’?
      The question should be why are Eritreans singled out or why are the worst when it becomes to normal behaviour and communications? The world doesn’t owe anything to Eritreans.

      • Tekeste July 13, 2016

        don’t forget Israel has so many African immigrants so it is not only about Eritreans.

  • Tekeste July 13, 2016

    Unfortunately, that is what they have learnt from today’s Eritrea of dumb tegadelti. The unlucky young generation of Eritrea only learned impoliteness, hopelessness, and unqualified/unequipped in today’s competitive world from their uncivilized and uneducated ghedli fathers and mothers. Lets hope and pray that things will not get worse for the next new generation of Eritrea, above all they will not have to immigrate to foreign lands/countries and be shamed and also treated badly inhumanly.

    • Realistic Eritrean July 16, 2016

      Dearest Tekeste ,

      You are missing the real point of Tewolde..Indeed ERitreans were proud people when lived under habesha family ,taff being charited ffro m Shiraro and Gojam ,coffee from kaffa,sugar from wonji ..from owners of riches of our former country ,Ethiopia ,we are reduced to being faggot bedouin bitches..Tewolde is confessing why he had to be part of gedli bandits to reduce Eritrean youth to such curse ,You see tekeste Tewolde is a brilliant persaon who speaks in parables like Jesus…..He has to mean that ,because if TEwiolde can bring examplñe of proud ERitrean people underr the yoke of the sodomite tegadeltis ,we like tto hear it.

  • Aman July 13, 2016

    I can not agree more brother. Whether we like it or not you and me are Eritreans we should keep on resisting and who knows as this is man made disaster, the solution has to come from us the people of this unfortunate land. Lets keep our hopes alive.

  • Berhe Tensea July 13, 2016

    It is a well known fact that about half of the refugee claimants in Israel are economic refugees and are in love with dictatorial regime.
    On many occasions the Israeli government was warned about these dictator loving bogus refugees.
    The Israeli government is urged to differentiate between genuine and others.
    Those who try to side with the worst enemy of the people don’t deserve protection and MUST be deported and we will do everything to that end.

  • Michael Tesfmariam July 13, 2016

    Well, what would you expect from a society where difference of opinion is considered as a crime; they must then behave the same way their self-opinionated extremely pompous leaders behave. Who in this plant thinks it is common when a leader of a country has never said sorry for his own people in 25 years in power apart from DEKI HADELIBI?
    My advice to JP is simple-ask your gov to gather these individuals with bad-manner and send them back home – they do not represent the cause of the oppressed people and country any more.

  • Is it a cruel jocke? July 13, 2016

    When I read this article about how impolite the Eritrean were, I dint know whether to smile or dismiss it as a cruel jockey..Of course, considering the resource of it, I decided to egnore it as desperate attempt by the Esraelies to dihumenize these ligitmate political asylum seekers, in doing this it is easier to deny their status as a political designers that they are! Nice try though but no thanks.

    • Is it a cruel jocke? July 13, 2016

      Dissidents that is

    • Fuhira July 14, 2016

      You are a cruel joker and what are you doing at Assenna, you should be in a circus playing with kids and with your childish jokes.

  • Berhe Tensea July 13, 2016

    K.tewelde,
    What an excellent assessment,, the sad irony is that about half of them or the would be lost forever are in love with their abuser.

  • yeakel July 13, 2016

    Dear k.tewolde!
    We all know what supposed to do but we love ourselves than our country. Instead of dying there until we change the situations…. we begging white to solve our problem. We are cowards, That it is just admit. We know now who is messing with our people, so what are we waiting for? White people to take care our business? But since when do they care about silly African people?

  • Hazo July 13, 2016

    Given how bad Eritrean refugees live and get treated by Arab nations, that is the kidnapping, rape, ransom of more $US 35,000 each to buy freedom, torture, organ harvest by Arab doctors, sex slavery, beheading by the savage dogs of the Islamic State/ISIS … in several Arab nations such as Libya, Egypt, Sudan and Saudi Arabia, the people and State of Israel look kinder, gentler and more advanced in the way they treat the more than 40,000 Eritrean refugees living in Israel. Still as a civilized and democratic nation and a signatory to many international conventions, the State of Israel needs to do more.

    “Finally, Israel could follow the report’s recommendation and “provide Eritrean nationals seeking protection with refugee status.” Since Israel’s border with Egypt has been sealed since 2013, there is only a limited Eritrean population in the country. Settling their status would help municipalities, schools, hospitals and clinics work better, and help disperse the high concentration of asylum seekers in Tel Aviv to other areas in the country. Most importantly, ending the perpetual uncertainty and unending ordeal of Eritreans in Israel is a moral imperative. Once the world starts treating them fairly, who knows? They may even say thank you.”

    • Berhe Tensea July 14, 2016

      Hazo,
      Excellent comment thank you.
      How can one respect us if the government in power doesn’t give a dam, and we fail to to demand to be ruled by the rule of law.
      By the way the kidnapping business is mainly done by PFDJ and its friends the Bedewins, and ransom money split in to half..

  • Hazo July 13, 2016

    Read below a news from medrek, see how every Jelfaf and nefaT Arab wanabe Sudanese is treating Eritrean refugees in Sudan now. If one of these human rights violations had happened in Israel, every Abid would have cried “Zionists” but as usual the coward Eritreans will not say a word on Arab crimes nor will they stand in front of the Sudanese consulate or Egyptian Emabssy to condemn the “Arab” Sudan.
    “ኣብ ከም ከሰላ፣ ፖርትሱዳን ገዳርፍን ካልኦት ከባቢታትን እታ ሃገር ተመሳሰልቲ ግፋታት ጸኒዖም ምህላዎም ክፍለጥ እንከሎ፣ ካብ መዓስከራት ስደተኛታት ሰሊኾም ናብ ከተማ ካርቱም ንዘምርሑ ስደተኛታት ንምልቃም እዉን ሲቪላዊ ኽዳን ዝለበሱ ኣባላት ጸጥታ ከም ኣሰጋገርቲን ደለልቲን መሲሎም ናብ`ተን መዓስከራት ተጸንቢሮም ምህላዎም ክርዳእ ተኻኢሉ ኣሎ።

    ኣባላት ጸጥታ መንግስቲ ሱዳን ነዚ ብመንግስቶም ዝድፈኣሉ ዘሎ መደብ ከም ዕድል ወሲድካ ንብረት ዜጋታትን ናይ ምዝርፉን ደቂ-ኣንስትዮ ናይ ምድፋርን ተግባራት ብግህዶ ይቕጽልዎ ከምዘለዉ ፥ ጎድኒ ጎድኒ ናይዚ`ዉን ወተሃደራዊ ክዳን ብምልባስ ተመሳሳሊ ተግባራት ዝፍጽሙ ናይ ዘለዉ በርጌስ ሱዳናውያን ብዝሒ ይውስኽ ምህላዉ እዮም ምንጭታትና ሓቢሮም ዘለዉ።”