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(ChristianCentury) Ugandan faith leaders weigh idea of accepting Israel's African refugees

Posted by: Semere Asmelash

Date: Saturday, 12 May 2018

Ugandan faith leaders weigh idea of accepting Israel's African refugees

Israel's government has offered financial incentives for thousands of asylum seekers to leave the country voluntarily—threatening to detain or deport them if they didn't.
May 11, 2018

FILE - In this March 13, 2018 file photo, African migrants hold signs during a protest outside the Holot detention center in the Negev Desert, southern Israel. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office said Monday, April 2, 2018, that it has reached an agreement with the United Nations to scrap plans to deport African asylum seekers and will resettle many in Western countries instead. Israel said it reached an "unprecedented understandings" with the U.N. refugee agency in which Israel will send more than 16,000 migrants to various Western countries willing to absorb them. (AP Photo/Sebastian Scheiner, File)
Sebastian Scheiner/Associated Press
African migrants hold signs during a protest in March outside the Holot detention center in the Negev Desert, southern Israel.


Some Ugandan faith leaders say their nation should accept African refugees facing deportation from Israel, while others counter that resettlement would place too heavy a burden on already overtaxed refugee programs.

Until early April, Uganda and Rwanda had been widely viewed as the two African countries that would absorb the refugees in a deal with Israel’s government, which has asserted that about 40,000 African refugees live in Israel illegally and should be deported. Ugandan officials had spoken positively of the possibility of accepting refugees from Israel. But officials from both Uganda and Rwanda have denied that they struck a deal with Israel to absorb them.

Ugandan clergy are nevertheless considering that at least some of the African refugees in Israel may still wind up in their country. Many say these refugees—many of whom have arrived in Israel since the mid-2000s, fleeing unrest and war in Eritrea, Sudan, and other war-torn countries, and surviving a dangerous trek across the Sinai Desert—should be welcomed in Uganda.

“When someone is escaping for security reasons and is seeking help desperately, as a Christian we have no alternative but to accept them,” said John Baptist Odama, Roman Catholic archbishop of Gulu, Uganda, and chair of the Uganda Episcopal Conference.

In November Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu developed a controversial plan to deport the refugees, offering them $3,500 to relocate to a third country or face indefinite imprisonment or deportation. The migrants and their supporters in Israel have argued that their home countries are still unsafe for them.

[As of early May, Israel’s government had renewed negotiations with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees about resettlement for the thousands of asulym seekers, Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported, and reversed its plans for deportation. Israeli officials continued to “encourage asylum seekers to leave voluntarily,” while considering their requests for legal status in Israel.]

Macleord Baker Ochola of Kitgum, a retired Anglican bishop and influential Ugandan peace envoy, supports resettlement of the refugees in Uganda.

“These migrants must find a place and I would be happy to see my country help,” said Ochola, who has worked to aid those displaced by a brutal rebel war in northern Uganda. 

Odama said Israel’s financial aid for migrants returning to Africa would be critical, given the refugees from the conflict in South Sudan that Uganda is already struggling to serve.

“Uganda is hosting thousands of other refugees from South Sudan,” Odama said. “There was an international appeal for support that did not go very well. This is why Israel’s support for these refugees and others would be needed.”

But other clerics worry that more refugees could take too big a toll on a network of aid workers and refugees that is already overwhelmed.

“There are already thousands and the numbers keep increasing,” said Johnson Gakumba, Anglican bishop of the Northern Uganda Diocese. “While the intention is good, I think we need to be careful to not allow numbers that we cannot manage.” 

Gakumba’s region is hosting most of the South Sudanese refugees.

“The resources are already strained,” he said.

Ugandan faith leaders weigh idea of accepting Israel's African refugees





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