February 11, 2009 4:22 PM
- Text
Israel To Turn Away Sudanese Refugees
(CBS/AP)
Israel said Sunday it would turn away refugees from the wartorn Darfur region of Sudan in an effort to stop the flow of Africans across Israel's southern border with Egypt.
Overnight, Israel expelled to Egypt about 50 Sudanese refugees who had entered Israel through Egypt's Sinai desert, Israeli government spokesman David Baker said. It was not immediately clear if any of those sent back were from Darfur, he said.
"The policy of returning back anyone who enters Israel illegally will pertain to everyone, including those from Darfur," Baker said.
Israel has until now accepted about 400 refugees from the Darfur region, according to Eytan Schwartz, an advocate for Darfur refugees in Israel.
Schwartz says considering the Holocaust, Israel should be ashamed, reports CBS News correspondent Robert Berger.
"We think that as Jews, we have an obligation to victims of genocide," says Schwartz.
Israel says the Sudanese slated for expulsion are migrant workers, and refugees from the civil war in Darfur can stay for now, reports Berger.
Fighting between ethnic African rebels and pro-government militias in the Western Sudanese region has killed more than 200,000 people and displaced 2.5 million since February 2003.
The refugees are among 1,160 Sudanese and a total of 2,800 Africans who have entered Israel in recent years.
Overnight, Israel expelled to Egypt about 50 Sudanese refugees who had entered Israel through Egypt's Sinai desert, Israeli government spokesman David Baker said. It was not immediately clear if any of those sent back were from Darfur, he said.
"The policy of returning back anyone who enters Israel illegally will pertain to everyone, including those from Darfur," Baker said.
Israel has until now accepted about 400 refugees from the Darfur region, according to Eytan Schwartz, an advocate for Darfur refugees in Israel.
Schwartz says considering the Holocaust, Israel should be ashamed, reports CBS News correspondent Robert Berger.
"We think that as Jews, we have an obligation to victims of genocide," says Schwartz.
Israel says the Sudanese slated for expulsion are migrant workers, and refugees from the civil war in Darfur can stay for now, reports Berger.
Fighting between ethnic African rebels and pro-government militias in the Western Sudanese region has killed more than 200,000 people and displaced 2.5 million since February 2003.
The refugees are among 1,160 Sudanese and a total of 2,800 Africans who have entered Israel in recent years.
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