Israelis seek asylum in Canada

2007-01-31

Richard Moore

Original source URL:
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20070127.ASYLUM27/TPStory/?query=asylum


Israelis seek asylum in Canada

Refugees claim they're persecuted; Israeli authorities scoff at accusations

ALEX DOBROTA

With a report from Mark MacKinnon

OTTAWA -- Canada is granting residency to growing numbers of Israeli asylum 
seekers, including ethnic Russians, ultra-orthodox Jews and political dissidents
who say they are victims of political or religious persecution in Israel.

This is upsetting Israeli authorities and members of the Jewish community in 
Canada. They say the refugee claimants are smearing the image of the Middle 
Eastern state as one that offers a haven to persecuted Jews the world over.

"It upsets people in Israel because immigrant absorption in Israel is a key 
value," said Ofir Gendelman, a spokesman for the Israeli embassy in Ottawa. 
"We're very hurt when we hear of these claims."

Israel's ambassador to Ottawa has recently called the claims "bogus" and urged 
officials here not to accept Israeli asylum seekers. Mr. Gendelman stressed that
Israel is a democratic state with human-rights institutions that serve all of 
its citizens.

But in many cases, Canada's Immigration and Refugee Board has disagreed.

More than 500 Israelis applied for refugee status in Canada last year, up from 
253 in 2000. The acceptance rate rose from 5 per cent to 31 per cent in 2005 and
18 per cent last year, when IRB accepted 45 claims -- an implicit recognition 
that these individuals suffered persecution in a state that could not protect 
their rights.

"In terms of refugee determination, the [questions are]: does the person have a 
well-founded fear of persecution, is there no other in-country flight 
alternative, and is there state protection available?" IRB spokeswoman Melissa 
Anderson said.

The recent spike in numbers has put Israel in the top 10 countries ranked by the
number refugee applications in Canada, along with Zimbabwe, Pakistan, Nigeria 
and Sri Lanka.

IRB officials are hard pressed to explain the increase in numbers.

Some observers have suggested that the surge in hostilities between Israel and 
the Palestinians is creating a climate where political dissidence and religious 
difference is less welcomed.

"Israel is a state that perceives itself as under siege," said William Sloan, a 
Montreal lawyer for many ultra-orthodox Jews who say they have been persecuted 
in Israel. Many ultra-orthodox Jews have publicly disagreed with many of 
Israel's policies, including its stand on the conflict with Palestinians.

"Anyone within the walls who tries to break that unity when you're under siege 
is not well viewed."

Shimon Fogel, of the Canada-Israel Committee, said these refugee claimants 
sometimes draw contempt from established Jewish community members in Canada. Mr.
Fogel qualified the claimants as opportunistic migrants seeking a shortcut into 
Canada's immigration system.

A notorious case soon to be heard by IRB involves the son of a Yemeni rabbi 
critical of Israeli authorities, who was jailed during the 1990s after an armed 
standoff.

Emanuel Meshulam came to Canada in 2005, claiming persecution at the hands of 
the Israeli police and the spy agency Mossad.

His father, Rabbi Uzi Meshulam, had accused Israel's European-dominated 
authorities of abducting hundreds of Yemeni children. The infants were separated
from their parents during their chaotic immigration to Israel in the late 1940s.

The disappearance itself stirred much controversy, fuelling allegations that 
European Jews look down on Jews from Arab countries. Mr. Meshulam's charges were
invalidated in several state investigations.

But in 1994, his armed followers demanded a fresh inquiry. After a standoff, 
Israeli forces stormed his compound, killing one of his devotees. Since then, 
Emanuel Meshulam says he was constantly followed by police and at one point 
threatened at gunpoint by Mossad agents.

"They threatened to take my children away," he said through a translator.

Other refugees are believed to be Russian-speaking citizens of the former Soviet
Union, a group that forms something of an economic underclass, often working in 
jobs that fall far below their skill levels.

Some refugee applicants are also believed to be Arab-Israelis, many of whom 
complain of outright racism in Israel since the beginning of the second 
intifada.
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