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Sunday, 27 March 2011

Tunisia's Jewish immigrants to Israel to receive special aid

JERUSALEM (JTA) -- Israel's Cabinet approved a program to assist new immigrants from Tunisia arriving in Israel in the wake of the country's recent revolution.
Under the plan approved at a meeting Sunday, the immigrants will receive special financial assistance of more than $9,000 in addition to the usual aid provided to new immigrants.
"We know that there is real distress among the Jews of Tunisia, many of whom would like to immigrate to Israel," Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said at the meeting. "We will increase the absorption basket in order to allow them to do so. 
"Israel is the state of the Jews. It worries about Jews wherever they are -- those who are here and those who would like to come here."
Minister Sofa Landver said that "The Government of Israel must see to the needs of new immigrants who arrive here hastily from Tunisia, without sufficient advance preparation like other immigrants. This proposal, which was formulated along with the Jewish Agency, is designed to ease, and answer, the difficulties for the families that, given the sensitive situation, decided to come here."
About 1,500 Jews are living in Tunisia. Some 1,100 Tunisian Jews live in Djerba, with the rest in the capital city of Tunis.
Ten Tunisian Jews made aliyah to Israel with the help of the Jewish Agency in late January amid political upheaval and violence in Tunisia that led to the overthrow of President Zein el-Abbadin Bin Ali.

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