Wednesday, December 29, 2010, by Menachem Gantz - Israel News
NGO
reports Eritreans traveling to Israel to seek asylum are being held
captive by terrorist group in northern Sinai. 'Extortion, organ
trafficking fund Hamas and al-Qaeda,” EveryOne co-President Roberto
Malini says
Tel Aviv, December 28, 2010.
Approximately 250 Eritrean refugees have been held captive and tortured
for the past month by Hamas in northern Sinai, human rights
organization EveryOne reported.
The
Italian-based organization sent an urgent plea to the Egyptian
government last Thursday, claiming that the refugees, who were making
their way to Israel to seek asylum, were captured by human
traffickers. The issue of illegal refugees infiltrating through the
Egyptian border has been dominating the news in Israel in recent
months, but it appears that many meet a dreadful fate even
before reaching the Jewish state. The humanitarian aid group reported
that the refugees in question encountered Hamas operatives along the
route, who promised to smuggle them into Israel for a payment of
$2,000. Instead, they were placed in a detention facility on the
outskirts of Rafah, an Egyptian town on the Gaza border, demanding their
families in Eritrea pay a $10,000 ransom for their release.
'Refugees target of organ trafficking'
It was further noted in the
statement that eight of the immigrants were killed, and four have gone
missing – allegedly being the subject of human organ harvesting and
trafficking. About 100 of them were transferred to a 'concentration
camp' at an unknown location, perhaps in the Palestinian territories.
The captives are beaten, the women and children raped. “The prisoners
eat poor food and are forced to drink their own urine,” the statement
reads. “Most of the migrants are contemplating suicide.”
According to Roberto Malini,
who heads EveryOne, the NGO is able to communicate with the Eritreans,
some of whom arrived in Italy a few months ago but were sent back to
Libya, where they were held for three months. During their stay in Italy
they were given cell phones so that they can keep the humanitarian aid
group updated along the journey. The captors let the prisoners use the
phones to request money from their families.
The refugees were thus able
to relate the poor conditions in which they were being held, and
describe their location – a house located near a government building,
surrounded by a fruit orchard – and even send photographs of the
detention facility.
'Egypt took no action'
According to refugees who
survived similar journeys and reached Israel, once the ransom is paid,
the traffickers escort the prisoners to certain points along the border.
Those who are unable to gather the funds will meet a bitter end.
EveryOne officials claim that
despite their repeated efforts to inform the Egyptian authorities of
the dire situation, no action has been taken to remedy it, primarily
because terrorist groups are behind the atrocities.
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