June 26, 2012|Hereward Holland | Reuters
"I don't want to be here. I didn't want to come back. I have nothing to do here," Mai said, as migrants carried laptops, toy cars, huge plasma screens and a guitar off the plane. "They said, 'Go back to your country, you are black people'."
The South Sudanese are a tiny community in Israel, making up only a few hundred of the 60,000 African migrants who have entered across the porous desert border with Egypt in recent years.
Israel launched weekly airlifts this month to send back the South Sudanese, as part of a crackdown on the African migrants - the majority of whom, Israel says, came illegally to work and threaten to upset the demographic character of the Jewish state.
Israeli humanitarian organizations say the migrants should be considered for asylum and it is legally questionable whether the majority - about 50,000 migrants from Eritrea and Sudan - can be deported.
Many of the South Sudanese migrants being expelled had stable jobs in the service sector, waiting tables in restaurants or scrubbing hotel toilets.
They return to a land ravaged by neglect and civil war for half a century, with some of the highest maternal mortality rates in the world and where just a quarter of the adult population can read.
South Sudan split from Sudan a year ago under a peace deal that ended decades of north-south civil war, but the fledgling state is struggling to build up basic institutions, end corruption and confront widespread rebel and tribal violence.
Akec Kuol, a hotel janitor who arrived in Israel five years ago, said he got a knock at the door at 5 a.m. and was taken to immigration. They told him he could go to jail or volunteer for repatriation, he said.
"If I was staying there now I would be in jail, I would die in jail," he said.
Others said they returned voluntarily after being given $1,300 at Tel Aviv airport and were less pessimistic about their return. One shouted the old southern rebel war cry "oyee" while flourishing a small flag of the new state.
On seeing her independent homeland for the first time, one woman ululated before erupting in tears and falling to her knees on the airport tarmac.
George Eyenyori, wearing a Jewish skullcap, said he was away from South Sudan for 27 years and had converted to Judaism in Israel. He now plans to start practicing the religion in South Sudan, which sits at the intersection of broadly Christian sub-Saharan Africa and the continent's mainly Muslim north.
An Israeli court rescinded the de facto refugee status of the South Sudanese migrants this month, and the new nation's government, sympathetic to the Jewish state, was happy to take them back.
Attempts to return migrants to Eritrea or Sudan are unlikely to be met with similar cooperation.
South Sudan received clandestine Israeli help for decades before its secession from Sudan last year, and is counting on Israeli investment in its struggling agriculture and oil sectors.
(Editing by Alexander Dziadosz and Pravin Char)
Newer articles:
- South Sudan issues complaint over deportations - Jerusalem Post - 28/06/2012 16:55
- ShelterBox goes to South Sudan - Reuters AlertNet - 28/06/2012 16:27
- South Sudan: Arms supplies fuelling violations in forgotten conflict - Amnesty International UK - 28/06/2012 14:28
- Foreign weapons 'fuelling South Sudan conflict' - BBC News - 28/06/2012 06:00
- US must enforce ban on child soldiers - Politico - 28/06/2012 03:30
Older news items
- South Sudan: worsening water shortages as refugee camps swell - Water World - 27/06/2012 10:33
- Israel expelling 150 South Sudanese - CBS News - 27/06/2012 06:40
- African Kony hunters need boots, food: envoys - Globe and Mail - 27/06/2012 00:00
- Cast out of Israel, South Sudanese face risky future - Reuters - 26/06/2012 23:30
- Economic Conference a Lesson for South Sudan, says Official - Voice of America - 26/06/2012 23:27
Latest news items (all categories):
- South Sudan sets 22 December for country's long-delayed first-ever election - 23/06/2026 15:44
- Ambassador Enarsson Backs Campaign to End Sexual Violence in Conflict at Juba Advocacy Event - 23/06/2026 15:41
- Rampant Junior Starlets crush South Sudan to clinch CECAFA bronze - 23/06/2026 15:26
- Validating Progress Towards Closing Immunity Gaps in South Sudan - 23/06/2026 15:23
- تحديد موعد أول انتخابات في تاريخ جنوب السودان - 23/06/2026 15:14
Random articles (all categories):
- Profited richness from human misery - 17/04/2011 01:00
- Are resurgent Ugandan rebels backed by Khartoum? - 14/09/2009 14:46
- Massive explosion hits Sudanese capital - 28/08/2023 03:42
- THE BIRTH OF THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH SUDAN - 07/07/2011 01:00
- South Sudan records higher disease related morbidity than war casualties - 19/04/2019 09:37
Popular articles:
- Who is the darkest person in the world, according to Guinness World Record? - 25/10/2022 02:34 - Read 146590 times
- School exam results in South Sudan show decline - 01/04/2012 17:58 - Read 27540 times
- Top 10 weakest currency exchange rates in Africa in 2023 - 19/07/2023 00:24 - Read 24702 times
- No oil in troubled waters - 25/03/2014 15:02 - Read 24035 times
- NDSU student from South Sudan receives scholarship - In-Forum - 29/09/2012 01:44 - Read 21914 times