16.09.24, Bar Peleg, Haaretz
Israel’s defense establishment is offering African asylum seekers who contribute to the war effort in Gaza – risking their lives – assistance in obtaining permanent status in Israel. This, according to personal accounts obtained by Haaretz.
Defense officials, speaking off the record, say the project is conducted in an organized manner, with the guidance of defense establishment legal advisers.
However, the ethical considerations of recruiting asylum seekers have not been addressed. To date, no asylum seekers who contributed to the war effort have been granted official status.
There are currently some 30,000 African asylum seekers living in Israel, most of them young men. Around 3,500 are Sudanese citizens with temporary status granted by the court because the state has not processed and ruled on their applications.
During the October 7 Hamas attack, three asylum seekers were killed. In the aftermath, many volunteered for agricultural work and civilian command centers, with some willing to enlist in the Israel Defense Forces. Defense officials realized they could use the help of the asylum seekers and exploit their desire to obtain permanent status in Israel as an incentive.
In one of the first months of the war, A. received a phone call from someone who claimed to be a police officer and who instructed him to report immediately to a security facility, without providing any explanation.
A. met with the official again, this time in a public place. The man gave him 1,000 shekels (about $270) in cash to cover his lost work days due to the meetings. He told him there was a two-week training period if he was drafted, joining other asylum seekers. He also promised that the pay he would receive for the military service would be similar to what he earned at his job.
“I asked, what do I get? Even though I’m not really looking for anything. But then he told me – If you go this way, you can receive documents from the State of Israel. He asked me to send him a photocopy of my ID and said he would take care of these things.”
A. does not know why exactly he was contacted and not others, and says: “The guy told me they were looking for special people. I asked him what made me special, he didn’t know me at all.”