Uganda denies it agreed to take deported African migrants from Israel
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Uganda denies it agreed to take deported African migrants from Israel

East African county rejects claims it would accept thousands of refugees from the Jewish state

Demonstration against the expulsion of undocumented immigrants and their families from Israel, Tel Aviv, 2009
Demonstration against the expulsion of undocumented immigrants and their families from Israel, Tel Aviv, 2009

Uganda has denied that it agreed to a deal to accept what could amount to thousands of African migrants that will be deported from Israel.

On Thursday, the African nation’s foreign minister told the French news agency AFP that there is no agreement with Israel, despite reports the previous day that Uganda and Rwanda would take the Sudanese and Eritrean migrants who refuse to return to their countries of origin.

Israel’s Cabinet on Wednesday approved a plan and a budget to deport nearly 40,000 African migrants. Prior to Wednesday’s approval, the Population and Immigration Authority in Israel notified migrants from Sudan and Eritrea that as of Jan. 1 they must return to their own countries, or to a third nation – reported to be either Rwanda or Uganda – or be jailed until they are deported. Migrants who chose to leave by March 31 will receive a payment of £2,500 ($3,500) as well as free airfare and other incentives.

“Uganda is disturbed by these reports,” Foreign Minister Henry Okello Oryem told AFP. “We have no such agreement with the government of Israel to send refugees here.”

AFP quoted the Israeli group ASSAF, or Aid Organisation for Refugees and Asylum Seekers, as saying thousands of African migrants deported from Israel previously have arrived in Uganda, making the country’s denial suspect.

Israel has already deported 20,000 of the some 60,000 African migrants who entered Israel prior to the construction of a barrier on its southern border with the Sinai, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Wednesday at the Cabinet meeting.

 

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