Israeli High Court Outlaws Detention Centre for African Migrants

The Israeli high court on Monday, 22 September 2014 ordered for the closure of a detention facility for African migrants.

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Council Established to Boost Investments by Kenyan Diaspora

The Kenyan government will soon form a council that will enhance the business activities of Kenyans in the diaspora and provide them with increased opportunities to reap additional benefits from their earnings in their countries of destination.

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Showing posts with label East African diaspora. Show all posts
Showing posts with label East African diaspora. Show all posts

Wednesday, 1 October 2014

Israeli High Court Outlaws Detention Centre for African Migrants



The Israeli high court on Monday, 22 September 2014 ordered for the closure of a detention facility for African migrants. The court further directed that close to 2,000 inmates currently held at the facility — known as Holot Residency Centre — be released within the next 90 days.

The court ruling was in response to an appeal by human rights groups against the decision by Israel’s parliament (Knesset) to enact a law that authorised the indefinite incarceration of migrants — mostly from the Sudan and Eritrea.

The law, which was passed in December 2013, allowed for the detention of illegal African immigrants for up to one year without trial. Proponents of the law had cited the migrants as illegal job seekers whereas it opponents had defended the migrants as asylum seekers who were escaping persecution and hardships in their countries.

The Knesset’s decision sparked widespread protests by tens of thousands of African refugees who wanted the former to rescind the decision. Efforts by close to 10,000 African refugees to seek audience with the speaker of Knesset were unsuccessful after they were barred from accessing parliament buildings. 
 Protests by these immigrants fell on deaf ears as the Knesset refused to rescind its decision (Image cerdit: www.forward.com)
Seven judges out of the nine-judge bench that presided over the case agreed that incarceration of the migrants would be a gross violation of their rights to freedom in addition to infringing on their right to dignity.

Justice Uzi Vogelman, one of the seven judges who argued for the closure of the detention centre, stated that under the circumstances, there was no option other than to order for the repeal of the law. “The measure is disproportionate and unconstitutional. There is almost no right that isn’t violated as a result of incarceration,” Justice Vogelman stated.

Reacting to the ruling, Bill Frelick, the Refugee Programs Director at Human Rights Watch urged the Israeli government to comply with the order. “The Israeli government should treat the people it locks up with basic dignity,” Frelick added.

However, Gideon Sa’ar, Israel’s Interior Minister, criticised the ruling adding that it would be hard to accept the ruling. “This is a mistake that means we cannot achieve a Jewish democratic state because our borders will be infiltrated by the illegal immigrants,” Sa’ar claimed.

Construction on the Holot Residency Centre began in 2012 in the Negev desert and was meant to house close to 8,000 migrants. The facility accommodated both male and female migrants including children and initially detained them for up to three years before deportation to their countries of origin. However, refugees from Sudan who could not be deported would be detained indefinitely. 
Refugee camp or detention centre? The Holot Residency Centre (Image courtesy of www.newsdaily.com)
 In September 2014, a Human Rights Watch report criticised Israeli authorities for using an unlawful coercion policy to force close to 7,000 African asylum seekers to return home — of this number, 6,400 were Sudanese whereas 367 were Eritreans. These actions, according to the report, put the returning refugees at the risk of torture and imprisonment in their home of countries.

According to the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR), Eritreans constitute the largest number of asylum seekers in Israel. Its statistics indicate that there were over 37,000 Eritrean asylum seekers in the country as at 2012; up from over 31,000 recorded in 2011. During the same period (2012), there were over 10,000 Sudanese asylum seekers up from 9,000 in 2012.



Friday, 6 June 2014

Council Established to Boost Investments by Kenyan diaspora



The Kenyan government will soon form a council that will enhance the business activities of Kenyans in the diaspora and provide them with increased opportunities to reap additional benefits from their earnings in their countries of destination. 

The National Diaspora Council of Kenya (NADICOK) — the name of the body being mooted — will lobby for the enactment and implementation of policies, which can assist Kenyans in the diaspora to run their business activities efficiently in Kenya as well as in the diaspora. According to Mr. Zachary Muturi, the Director for Diaspora and Consular Affairs at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the council’s role would be to provide advisory information as well as formulate the necessary investment vehicles. 
 Mr. Muturi was speaking at the 2nd Annual Kenya Diaspora Trade and Investment Conference on Saturday 31 May 2014, convened by the Bank of Africa and Kenya’s embassy in France. Kenyan ambassador to France, Salma Ahmed, encouraged Kenyans in the diaspora to pay more attention to business ventures. 
Ambassador Ahmed also promised that the embassy would negotiate for special terms with commercial banks in the country to boost Kenyans who would wish to undertake business opportunities in France. Furthermore, the embassy promised to facilitate business transactions for Kenyans residing in France as well as other countries, such as, Portugal and Serbia. 
 
Ambassador Ahmed (centre) flanked by other participants at the 2nd Annual Kenya Diaspora Trade and Investment Forum  (Image Credit: geraldbaraza.blogspot.com)

The establishment of NADICOK is good news for the Kenyan diaspora, which has always perceived their government as one that pays little attention to their welfare. An article by Paul Kerre in January 2014 captures the dissatisfaction of Kenyans in the diaspora with their government. Key among their complaints is the frosty relations with Kenyan Foreign Missions in various countries, which they consider to be disinterested in matters affecting Kenyans living abroad, such as, domestic violence and suicide. According to Kerre, the diaspora feels that the government’s focus is dedicated to their remittances for investment purposes while ignoring other issues affecting them.

Kenya is one of the top remittance receiving countries in sub-Sahara Africa. According to the World Bank’s 2011 Migration and Remittances Factbook, the country received $1.8 billion worth of remittances in 2010; only Nigeria ($10 billion) and Sudan ($3.2 billion) received more remittances from their diaspora. Another study by the World Bank in 2010 titled, Remittances to Kenya, reveals that 32 per cent of the respondents interviewed use about half of the remittances received on daily expenses, such as, clothes, food, medicine and housing. 
Harnessing the Developmental Potential of Kenyans Living in the UK, a study conducted by the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) in 2010 revealed that 24 per cent of the 78 respondents interviewed had remitted money for investment purposes. Forty-two per cent of these investments had been unsuccessful whereas 46 per cent were successful. For those who had invested unsuccessfully, the most cited reason for unsuccessful investments was inability to access credit facilities (40%). 

Similarly, 40 per cent of the respondents stated that their investments failed because they did not have sufficient information regarding formal investment procedures in the country. Other challenges cited included poor management (33%), exorbitant expenses (27%) as well as inadequate infrastructure (26%). 


Do you think NADICOK will improve investment opportunities for Kenyans in the diaspora?