Israel's High Court blocks state from deporting pregnant foreign workers
рус   |   eng
Search
Sign in   Register
Help |  RSS |  Subscribe
Euroasian Jewish News
    World Jewish News
      Analytics
        Activity Leadership Partners
          Mass Media
            Xenophobia Monitoring
              Reading Room
                Contact Us

                  World Jewish News

                  Israel's High Court blocks state from deporting pregnant foreign workers

                  Israel's High Court blocks state from deporting pregnant foreign workers

                  13.04.2011, Israel

                  The High Court of Justice retracted on Wednesday an Israeli policy mandating that a pregnant foreign worker who stops working to give birth loses her work visa for 90 days after the birth. During that time, the woman must leave Israel and can only return without the infant.
                  Judge Ayala Procaccia overturned the policy Wednesday, calling on the Ministry of Interior to take steps to formulate a new policy. She attacked the former policy saying that it constitutes an intrinsic breach of foreign workers' rights, stripping them of basic familial privileges.
                  She continued, saying that it was unjust to give foreign women the right to work here and then expect them to continue working in spite of giving birth.
                  The judge called the policy a deep breach of the foreign worker's rights, saying "it affects her right to be a parent, to have a family and to support herself. The policy is incongruent with Israeli labor laws that safeguard the rights of the woman both during and after birth."
                  Procaccia called the policy discriminatory, saying foreign workers are entitled to equal workers' rights, adding that it goes against the protection of foreign workers' rights, and is harmful to international confidence.
                  The policy was initially appealed in 2005 by Naamat, a center that assists foreign workers, and Doctors for Human Rights.
                   
                  By Tomer Zarchin

                  Haaretz.com