Vanguard News Network
VNN Media
VNN Digital Library
VNN Reader Mail
VNN Broadcasts

Old June 10th, 2012 #1
Dawn Cannon
Senior Member
 
Dawn Cannon's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: The Vampire Ball
Posts: 6,409
Default Negro infiltrators ruin Eilat, Israeli children not safe

http://www.jpost.com/NationalNews/Ar...aspx?id=273298

Quote:
There are around 7,000 African infiltrators residing in Israel's southernmost city, a higher proportion than TA.


Eilat could descend into lethal, racial conflict between veteran Israeli residents and the city’s African migrant population if the influx of migrants continue and the government does not handle the problem effectively, residents and local officials told The Jerusalem Post this week.

“We have managed to keep things under control so far, but I have no idea how long it can last, the tension here worries me a great deal,” Eilat Mayor Meir Yitzhak Halevy said Wednesday, adding that his office is flooded on a daily basis with complaints from residents who say their children don’t feel safe in their own neighborhoods, which he said have been taken over completely by Africans.

Using military-style language, Halevy describes the migrants as “a population that conquers more and more land as it grows” and said that Eilat has seen “more and more neighborhoods coming under their control.”

Though there are no exact figures on the size of the migrant population in Eilat, Halevy estimated there are around 7,000 in the city of 55,000, a higher proportion than that of Tel Aviv, the epicenter of Israel’s African migrant population. City leaders led protests in Eilat against the migrants before such protests came to south Tel Aviv, with mayor Halevy drawing fire for putting red “warning flags” up on sign posts through neighborhoods heavily populated by migrants.

Eilat has also drawn the attention of the nationwide media due to a campaign waged by local parents to ban children of African migrants from studying in local Eilat schools. To this day, no children of African migrants study in the city’s schools, and following the closing of a school at the nearby, former resort village of “Nof Eilat” this year, the 50 or so children will be moved to an alternative facility of their own in the city, according to the Education Ministry.

The eyes of the southern resort town were on south Tel Aviv’s Hatikvah neighborhood three weeks ago, as residents incensed about the influx of African migrants to south Tel Aviv began smashing African-run storefronts and attacking people caught in the street who they identified as “infiltrators’.
 
Old June 10th, 2012 #2
Donald E. Pauly
Banned
 
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Las Vegas
Posts: 4,130
Smile Diversity in the Holy Land

Nothing does my heart good so much as to see G-d's Pets get a dose of Negro diversity right in their home country. They bring the so called "Lost Boys" into our country to rape our women but don't like Stone Age Africans to rape their Jewish Princesses.
 
Old June 11th, 2012 #3
Donald E. Pauly
Banned
 
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Las Vegas
Posts: 4,130
Smile Negro Round Up in Israel

This is a timid step to cleanse Israel of Negroes and make room for our 6 million Jews to go home.
Quote:
http://www.jpost.com/NationalNews/Ar...aspx?id=273455

South Sudanese: Israel won't show us any mercy
By BEN HARTMAN
LAST UPDATED: 06/11/2012 21:53

Immigration authorities detain 70 South Sudanese nationals ahead of their planned deportation from Israel.



“All we wanted was more time, and Israel will not show us any mercy,” South Sudanese migrant Simon Mayer said on Monday, hours after immigration authorities launched a new wave of detentions of South Sudanese across the country. Mayer said that members of Israel’s South Sudanese population, which numbers around 700, were for the most part staying behind closed doors on Monday to avoid getting scooped up by immigration authorities.

Mayer said mass confusion continues to grip the community, as well as bitterness about a protest campaign waged in recent months that failed to reach the hearts and minds of most Israelis. “We held these [protest] actions for the past four months, showed people how our children are crying and nothing helped, nobody showed mercy. We won’t do this again, we don’t want the press to come and show a funeral on national television.”

As he spoke, the arrests continued in south Tel Aviv, Eilat, and elsewhere across Israel, while a group of four men sat outside a South Sudanese community center in the Neveh Sha’anan center, with looks of exhaustion on their faces. Inside the center, several Sudanese napped in a single room and a number of men present said that they were prepared to go when the officers come to arrest them.

Around the corner on Tchelnov Street, 39-year-old Simon Koang Gai continued to work on a leather bar stool at the “Holy Land” upholstery store he runs. The father of four had only minutes earlier watched immigration officials arrest several of his friends from a building a few doors down, but he said he would continue working until the officials came to arrest him.

He also said that while his children and wife are already booked on a flight leaving next week, he will stay behind until the last minute, partly so he can receive a paycheck he is owed by an Eilat hotel where he worked for a few weeks earlier this year. “When they come I’ll be ready though,” Koang Gai said, before pointing at a small messenger bag on a wooden table. “See that bag, when I came to Israel that’s all I had on my shoulder. If I have to, I can leave with just that.”

Speaking to The Jerusalem Post from Juba on Monday, former Jerusalemite Kai Khong talked about the confusion on the streets of the South Sudanese capital following reports of the deportations. “We started hearing about it last week on the television after the court made the decision. There’s a lot of confusion in the news, we don’t [know] the real reason why they want to send South Sudanese back though.”

Khong, who lived in Israel for six years before moving back to South Sudan after the country became independent in July, said the decision to deport South Sudanese could harm relations between Israel and the new African state. “The South Sudanese people love Israel, but this could change. People who come back could tell them, Israel is not our friend, and this is what I’m worried about,” Khong said, adding “South Sudan is a young country so it must look to other countries for help and decide which ones are its friends and which ones aren’t.”

Khong, who says he was the first South Sudanese in the country when he moved to Israel by way of Sinai in 2005, is now unemployed in Juba, and says a similar fate awaits those South Sudanese who return to the country after they are deported from Israel. “They will not find jobs when they come back here, the country is very very newborn. If some people come back here with an education, maybe they can find jobs, but if not there are no jobs here.”

More than anything though, he expressed the confusion common among his compatriots in facing deportation in Israel. “Why go after these few hundred South Sudanese when there are thousands of other Africans in Israel? This is the big question on the street in Juba. We just don’t know why.”

This week’s arrests by immigration officers of several dozen African migrants in the south and center of Israel is the first step in the eventual expulsion of all illegal migrants from Israel, Interior Minister Eli Yishai said Monday.

On Monday, immigration authorities rounded up some 50 illegal African migrants, following the arrests on Sunday of 25, including eight South Sudanese in Eilat. The Population, Immigration, and Border Authority did not release official arrest figures by Monday afternoon, as the number was still rising.

Speaking to Israel Radio, Yishai said the real crux of the problem is the Eritreans and Sudanese who make up around 90 percent of Israel’s illegal African migrant community. Yishai vowed to work to eventually expel them from Israel as well, adding that “I am not working out of hate of foreigners; I am working out of love for my nation.” “Giving up on this mission would be tantamount to giving up on the declaration of independence,” he added.

According to Yishai, the detainees will be taken to a holding facility in the south of Israel and by next week will be on a charter flight to South Sudan.

The arrests follow a ruling issued by the Jerusalem District Court last Thursday, which rejected a petition by human rights groups to bar the expulsion of South Sudanese migrants, saying that the NGOs had not proven that the lives of returnees would be in danger if they return.

The arrests also began Sunday in spite of promises that South Sudanese would have a week to voluntarily leave before arrests begin. Orit Marom of ASSAF, the Aid Organization for Refugees and Asylum Seekers in Israel, slammed the arrests as a “shame.” “Children getting ready for school were taken from their homes in the early morning,” she told The Jerusalem Post. “It’s despicable.

How do they expect these people to submit individual requests to stay in Israel, as the state required of them, [while in custody]?” The Population, Immigration and Border Authority said that though the week had not passed, they were still allowed to begin arresting the illegal migrants.

Last edited by Donald E. Pauly; June 11th, 2012 at 07:57 PM. Reason: Format
 
Old June 12th, 2012 #4
Squarehead Chris
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Crawlin' from the wreckage
Posts: 1,951
Default

Ha! Ha!

Ten years from now, the grey/blue haired jews of tel aviv will be pushing strollers through the streets containing little half-monkey grandchillens.
You know, the kind whose heads loll around like they have no neck muscles, and whose eyes are seemingly unable to focus on any one point in space or time.

Ha! Ha! Ha!... As I have said before... It couldn't happen to a more deserving bunch.
 
Old June 15th, 2012 #5
Donald E. Pauly
Banned
 
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Las Vegas
Posts: 4,130
Smile “Going Home” (“Chozrim HaBayita”).

The Rastafarian dream, Negroes going back to Africa.

Quote:
http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/156830

A Few Hundred South Sudanese 'Going Home'
A few hundred South Sudanese citizens have signed an agreement to return to their native land and are set to fly back home on Sunday.

By Chana Ya'ar
First Publish: 6/13/2012, 10:38 AM


Caption:Sudanese migrant in Israel

A few hundred South Sudanese citizens have signed an agreement to return to their native land following a nationwide crackdown by the government on illegal entry into the country. About 280 South Sudanese citizens signed the documents between Tuesday and Wednesday as police conduct a sweep through Israel, searching for those who had entered the country through the southern border illegally. Overnight Tuesday, another 100 illegal entrants were arrested in a sweep by police, dubbed Operation “Going Home” (“Chozrim HaBayita”). Most of the arrests were made in the cities of Tel Aviv and Eilat. The Negev cities of Arad and Be'er Sheva, both of which have been inundated with African illegals for several years, were left untouched.

On Sunday, a direct flight is scheduled to bring nearly 200 of the illegals back to their home country of South Sudan, which is now an independent nation and is no longer considered unsafe. A delegation of immigration officials from South Sudan is set to meet this week with Israeli officials from the Immigration and Population Authority. The two teams are expected to coordinate the repatriation of the South Sudanese citizens who will be flying home, most of whom made the decision to return prior to the start of Operation Going Home. A second plane is expected to fly some 200 of the South Sudanese illegal entrants back to their native land in mid-July, authorities said.

According to the government sources, the South Sudanese citizens who are returning willingly are to receive job training in Israel. In addition, Israel is conducting talks with South Sudan over the possibility of providing further job training in the African nation once the deportees return. Some of the possible vocational skills to be taught may include agricultural training, according to the sources.
 
Old June 20th, 2012 #6
Donald E. Pauly
Banned
 
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Las Vegas
Posts: 4,130
Smile Israel Speeding Up Detention Camp Construction

It doesn't take the Jews very long to deal with their Negroes once they set their minds to it.
Quote:
http://www.jpost.com/NationalNews/Ar...aspx?id=274641

'Speed construction of migrants' detention center'
By BEN HARTMAN06/21/2012 03:38
National Planning and Construction Council pushes for Negev holding facility for African migrants to be build faster.

Photo: Marc Israel Sellem

The National Planning and Construction Council will push for changes in the infrastructure of a Negev holding facility for African migrants in order to allow it to be built faster, according to a statement released by the council on Wednesday. The council said that the changes to the original plan approved by the government in March would place more emphasis on tents and non-permanent buildings in order to expedite the construction of the facility. However, Interior Minister Eli Yishai said during the meeting that the changes must not bring with them any sort of decline in the humanitarian standards of the facility, which is expected to house tens of thousands of migrants.

The facility, to be built next to Ketziot Prison in the Negev, will include public buildings such as schools, religious facilities, social clubs, employment workshops and open leisure areas. When complete, the facility is set to cover some 250 acres of land and house 8,000 to 10,000 people, making it the world’s largest housing facility for asylum seekers.

During the meeting, opposition to the adaptations were voiced by Ramat Negev Regional Council head Samuel Rifman, who said the council would favor instead a facility like the one approved in March over an open tent city, even if it took more time to construct. He also called for the Planning and Construction Council to begin work on a waste-water treatment facility for the detention center.

Wednesday’s meeting came as people across the world marked “World Refugee Day.” According to figures from the United Nations High Commission on Refugees (UNHCR) there are currently over 42 million forcibly displaced people in the world, with 4.3 million displaced in 2011. Of these 42 million, 10.4 million are recognized as refugees, and over a quarter of them are from Afghanistan alone. Of the world’s refugees, 80 percent are hosted in countries in the developing world, with Pakistan alone housing 1.7 million refugees, the most of any country on earth.

UNHCR figures state that 800,000 people were displaced as refugees across international borders in 2011, the most in a decade. The higher number can be linked in large part to the fighting that has gripped the Arab world over the past year, but also famine in eastern Africa. World Refugee Day also falls on Eritrean Martyrs Day, a national holiday in Eritrea which commemorates the tens of thousands who died in the 30-year struggle with Ethiopia for independence. Eritreans make up the overwhelming majority of the African migrants in Israel, from 75-85 percent of the over 60,000 African migrants in Israel.

In Israel, the asylum-seeker newspaper The Refugee Voice published a special edition included as an insert in Haaretz newspaper in honor of World Refugee Day. The issue is the first edition of the paper released since anti-migrant violence began in south Tel Aviv in recent months, and the newspaper, printed in English, Arabic, Hebrew and Tigrinya, bears the front cover headline “5 years of neglect, 6 Molotov cocktails, one burnt apartment, 700 deported refugees, 60,000 people with no rights, Where do we go from here?”

Last edited by Donald E. Pauly; June 20th, 2012 at 11:24 PM. Reason: typo
 
Old June 29th, 2012 #7
Donald E. Pauly
Banned
 
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Las Vegas
Posts: 4,130
Smile Negroes Not Homesick

Stone Age Africans are demonstrating outside our Embassy in Israel because they are being sent home. We have to do something to make these Negroes homesick. We need to make room in Israel to send them our 6 million Jews.

Quote:
http://www.jpost.com/NationalNews/Ar...aspx?id=275743

Eritreans protest deportation outside US embassy
By BEN HARTMAN06/29/2012 19:20

Hundreds of asylum seekers demonstrate in plea for intervention from Washington; banners read "we need protection." Several hundred Eritrean asylum seekers demonstrated outside the US Embassy in Tel Aviv on Friday, to issue a plea for Washington to intervene to ease the problems they say they face in Israel.

Carrying signs saying “no deportations of asylum seekers” and “we need protection” among others, the asylum seekers said they believe that only Washington has the clout and is close enough to Israel to encourage the country to accept their asylum claims and ensure their protection from violence and racism within the country.

Waving an American flag on the beachfront promenade across the street from the embassy, Eritrean activist Haile Mengistab told The Jerusalem Post he believes that “the American government can put pressure on the Israeli government, which has stigmatized the entire Eritrean population [in Israel].”

Quoting anti-migrant statements made recently by Knesset MKs, Mengistab said “we are not cancers, we are not a national plague, we are not infected with AIDS. We want the American ambassador to help us, because they [the US] are a strong nation and they and Israel are like mother and son. They can convince the Israeli government to be hospitable to the Eritreans and give them asylum,” adding “we’re not here to demolish Israel’s Jewish character."

Eritreans are estimated to make up as much as 40,000 of the more than 60,000 illegal African migrants in Israel. Israel cannot legally deport them to Eritrea, because it is likely that they would face persecution if returned to the country, which has been ruled by a dictatorship since independence was achieved in 1993.

Nonetheless, tension has gripped the Eritrean community in recent months, because of the escalating anti-migrant rhetoric used by Israeli politicians, violence directed at Africans, and recent vows by Interior Minister Eli Yishai to explore ways to expel all African migrants from Israel, including the Eritreans. Such vows have been made against the backdrop of the ongoing deportation of Israel’s 700-1,500 strong South Sudanese and 500-1,500 Ivorian communities.

Mulugeta Tumughi, 24, said the demonstrators came to the embassy because “America is the strongest and most well-known country in world that has the power and a voice that can be heard in all of the world.” Tumughi spoke of how the US took in Eritrean refugees during the war with Ethiopia and said that he believes that the country could help broker an agreement to find a third country that could absorb some of Israel’s migrant population.

He also spoke of recent violence against African migrants in Israel, and said how the country no longer feels safe, and he and others are no longer confident Israel will listen to their pleas. “Israelis can help us too, but they have shut their eyes and ears to us.”
 
Reply

Tags
eilat, operation going home

Share


Thread
Display Modes


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 05:59 PM.
Page generated in 0.21593 seconds.