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New Visa Rules Cut Off Refugees in Israel From Bank Accounts - Reports

© AFP 2023 / JACK GUEZAfrican immigrants from Eritrea sit in the street in the southern district of the Israeli city of Tel Aviv on April 5, 2018
African immigrants from Eritrea sit in the street in the southern district of the Israeli city of Tel Aviv on April 5, 2018 - Sputnik International
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A growing number of refugees in Israel find themselves unable to withdraw money from their own bank accounts due to unannounced changes made to their visa numbers by the government.

Hundreds of asylum seekers in Israel cannot access their bank accounts after renewing their visas because the Population and Immigration Authority altered their visa numbers, Haaretz reports.

According to the newspaper, dozens of complaints have been filed with various aid organizations.

"They changed my visa number and I didn’t notice that the number on the new visa was different. Now I can’t deposit or withdraw money from my account. I went back to the Population Authority and told them I have a problem with the bank because of the change in the visa number, but they told me that they can’t do anything about it," an asylum seeker from Eritrea told Haaretz.

African migrants pose for a photograph in front of the Holot detention center in the Negev Desert, southern Israel. Tuesday, Sept. 23, 2014 - Sputnik International
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The Israeli Hotline for Refugees and Migrants also pointed out that "for most asylum seekers, their visa and their release subject to restrictions is their only means of identification,"  and that it should pose no problem for the Population and Immigration Authority to "add the old identity number on lines meant for remarks."

It remains unclear at this time what is the purpose of this initiative.

Yonit Naftali Kav El, founder and head of a volunteer project that provides aid to refugees, has claimed that:

"Since we’ve accompanied the line, every week or two we see a new edict, something small or big that disrupts their lives and makes them more difficult. The government’s policy is to encourage [the asylum seekers] to leave the country and the most efficient way to do this is not to let asylum seekers live here on the most basic level," she said.

READ MORE: 'Win-Win': Israel Scraps Refugee Deportation Plan, Seeks New Deal With UN

Israeli media earlier reported that Tel Aviv seeks to resume negotiations with the UN refugee agency to resettle the roughly 38,000 asylum seekers living in the country, the majority of whom fled Eritrea and Sudan.

The announcement was made after Israel acknowledged the failure of its refugee relocation plan and its inability to forcibly deport the asylum seekers.

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