Israel Plans to Bring in 15,000 Workers from Morocco

23 June 2022, Israel, village of Salem: Construction workers carry on building a new Part of the Separation Wall around the village of Salem in North border of Israel with West-Bank city of Jenin. (dpa)
23 June 2022, Israel, village of Salem: Construction workers carry on building a new Part of the Separation Wall around the village of Salem in North border of Israel with West-Bank city of Jenin. (dpa)
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Israel Plans to Bring in 15,000 Workers from Morocco

23 June 2022, Israel, village of Salem: Construction workers carry on building a new Part of the Separation Wall around the village of Salem in North border of Israel with West-Bank city of Jenin. (dpa)
23 June 2022, Israel, village of Salem: Construction workers carry on building a new Part of the Separation Wall around the village of Salem in North border of Israel with West-Bank city of Jenin. (dpa)

Morocco and Israel are planning to fly in thousands of Moroccan workers to Tel Aviv to meet local demand.

Up to 15,000 workers, including hundreds of engineers, are part of the plan.

Chairman of the Construction and Wood Workers Union in Israel’s Histadrut labor federation, Yitzhak Moyal, said: “We are short 40,000 workers in ten different professions.”

Since relaxing coronavirus restrictions, Israel has faced challenges in bringing in foreign workers, especially from Eastern Europe and China.

Domestic labor, backed by Palestinian workers, no longer meets the demands, even though 120,000 Palestinians from the Israeli-occupied West Bank and 22,000 in the Gaza Strip are permitted to work in Israel.

Moyal revealed that joint efforts by the Moroccan and Israeli foreign ministries were capped with an agreement to launch a pilot program to employ a few hundred Moroccan laborers in the construction sector and dozens in nursing and assisting the elderly.

He hoped that over 15,000 Moroccan workers would eventually be recruited.

He noted that Moroccans are skilled in the sectors that are witnessing a shortage of labor in Israel, adding: “This could really improve the pace of construction in Israel.”

The first batch of construction laborers may arrive in Israel by 2023.



Iraqi PM Slams Israel’s Complaint over Attacks by Iraqi Iran-Backed Militias

13 January 2023, Berlin: Mohammed Shia al-Sudani, prime minister of Iraq, makes remarks at a press conference after his talks with Chancellor Scholz at the Federal Chancellery. (dpa)
13 January 2023, Berlin: Mohammed Shia al-Sudani, prime minister of Iraq, makes remarks at a press conference after his talks with Chancellor Scholz at the Federal Chancellery. (dpa)
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Iraqi PM Slams Israel’s Complaint over Attacks by Iraqi Iran-Backed Militias

13 January 2023, Berlin: Mohammed Shia al-Sudani, prime minister of Iraq, makes remarks at a press conference after his talks with Chancellor Scholz at the Federal Chancellery. (dpa)
13 January 2023, Berlin: Mohammed Shia al-Sudani, prime minister of Iraq, makes remarks at a press conference after his talks with Chancellor Scholz at the Federal Chancellery. (dpa)

Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani has dismissed an Israeli complaint to the UN Security Council about strikes by Iraq's Iran-backed Shiite militias on Israel as a "pretext and argument to attack Iraq" and to "expand the war in the region."

Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar had earlier posted on X a letter to the Security Council saying that "Israel has the inherent right to self-defense ... and to take all necessary measures to protect itself and its citizens against the ongoing acts of hostilities by Iranian-backed militias in Iraq."

An umbrella group of Iraqi militias known as the "Islamic Resistance in Iraq" has regularly launched drone strikes on targets in Israel in recent months in support of its Hamas and Hezbollah allies in the ongoing wars in the Middle East.

Saar said some of the militias are part of the pro-Iran Popular Mobilization Forces — a coalition of mostly Shiite armed groups that's technically part of the Iraqi army although it operates in practice largely outside state control — and urged the Iraqi government to "take immediate action to halt and prevent these attacks."

Al-Sudani’s office said in a statement on Tuesday that Iraq has refused to enter into the regional conflict while "seeking to provide relief to the Palestinian and Lebanese people."