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Kyiv expected to make decision on Uman pilgrims this week, Ukrainian official says

A major decision on Ukraine’s policy toward Israeli pilgrimages to Uman this year is expected within the next 48 hours, a Ukrainian diplomat told The Times of Israel Thursday.

Senior officials in Kyiv will decide by Saturday evening how they will handle the tens of thousands of worshipers expected to make the annual journey for the Rosh Hashanah holiday.

Earlier this month, Jerusalem reportedly dismissed as baseless a threat by Ukraine’s ambassador to Israel that Kyiv would close its borders to Israeli pilgrims making their way to Uman, in retaliation for Israel deporting Ukrainians.

The deportations relate to Ukrainians coming into the country ostensibly as tourists, not as refugees, in cases where Israel suspects they are planning to remain or seek employment illegally.

“There is no basis for the threats of the ambassador of Ukraine in Israel about [Ukraine] closing its borders ahead of the Rosh Hashanah events in Uman,” an unnamed diplomatic source was quoted as saying by the Ynet news site. “Those in Ukraine’s government who are more senior than [the ambassador] made this very clear to Israeli officials.”

However, the Ukrainian official indicated to The Times of Israel that there were those in Kyiv pushing for an aggressive response to Israel.

The official also said a clear statement by Interior and Health Minister Moshe Arbel that Ukrainians would be protected would go a long way toward mollifying Ukrainian officials seeking to give Israel a measure of payback.

The Israeli diplomatic source last week accused the Ukrainian ambassador of inflating numbers regarding deportations of Ukrainian refugees by Israel and claimed this was “not the first time that the ambassador has tried to create a media storm, thus harming the good relations between our countries.”

In a weekly address earlier this month, Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky said that the “rights of Ukrainian citizens must be guaranteed,” after receiving a report on how nationals are treated in foreign countries — without explicitly naming Israel.

The next day, Korniychuk made it clear in a statement that Zelensky’s message was directed at Israel.

File: Ukrainian Ambassador to Israel Yevgen Korniychuk speaks during a conference in Jaffa, June 7, 2022. (Avshalom Sassoni‎‏/Flash90)

“The Ukrainian government will not tolerate the humiliation of its citizens upon entering Israel. We will suspend our bilateral visa waiver deals, according to article seven of the intergovernmental agreement,” Korniychuk stated.

“This possibility is on our government’s table,” he added. “It is unthinkable that we would have to go out of our way to host tens of thousands of Israelis in Uman, with a high-security risk and a huge logistical effort, while the Israeli government abuses our citizens who come to Israel within the framework of a treaty between the two countries.”

“If Israel wants its citizens to be able to come to Ukraine as tourists, including to Uman, I believe Prime Minister [Benjamin] Netanyahu should intervene personally to find a solution to the current matter,” he said.

In response, Arbel rejected claims of mistreatment of Ukrainians.

“Israel’s immigration policy welcomes tourists from many countries in the world, including from Ukraine,” he said in a statement. “In instances where there is a suspicion they are using their tourist visa unlawfully to work or settle down, the Population, Immigration and Border Authority [works to prevent this], according to its legal authority.”

He added that Israel had sent medicines to Ukraine, and said that his ministry would continue cooperating with Kyiv in health-related matters.

File: Jewish pilgrims gather in front of Ukrainian border guards at the checkpoint Novaya Guta near Novaya Guta, Belarus, September 18, 2020. (AP Photo)

As part of a bilateral deal, Ukrainians can enter Israel and visit for up to three months. Due to the ongoing war in the country, Israel has extended the three-month visas of non-Jewish refugees after a cap limiting their entry was struck down by the High Court of Justice. Those with Jewish roots have automatic rights to become citizens under Israel’s Law of Return.

According to data from the Ukrainian embassy, in the first half of 2023, Israel deported 2,037 Ukrainian citizens, compared to 2,705 for all of 2022, the Ynet news site reported.

Korniychuk told The Times of Israel earlier this month that around 10 percent of Ukrainian tourists entering the country were being deported.

Illustrative: A Ukrainian serviceman of the State Border Guard Service works in a position in Bakhmut on February 9, 2023, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. (Yasuyoshi Chiba/AFP)

Uman, 200 kilometers (125 miles) south of the capital, Kyiv, typically attracts thousands of pilgrims for Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year.

Despite travel warnings last year, over 20,000 Israelis traveled to celebrate Rosh Hashanah at the Uman burial site of Rabbi Nachman of Breslov, a revered Hasidic master who died in 1810.

Those travel warnings are still in effect but are unlikely to deter worshipers.

In 2020, at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, Kyiv closed its borders in September to avoid an outbreak ahead of Rosh Hashanah. Thousands of would-be pilgrims traveled to neighboring Belarus in an attempt to cross the border to Ukraine but were blocked by local authorities.

Earlier this month, Foreign Minister Eli Cohen and Jewish Tradition Minister Meir Porush were in Moldova to discuss the country’s readiness to handle the thousands of Jewish pilgrims expected to fly to Chisinau on the way to Uman. Ukraine’s airspace has been closed since the outbreak of war in February 2022, and Moldova is the closest neighboring country to Uman.

“The anticipated arrival of tens of thousands of worshipers in Uman is a great challenge,” said Cohen. “In my conversations with the president and foreign minister, I thanked them for their readiness to find the safest and most effective mechanism for those Israelis who choose to travel through Moldova this year on the way to Uman.”

Kyiv and Jerusalem have also seen tensions over Israel’s policy on supplying aid to Ukraine. Though it has provided Ukraine with humanitarian aid and is also working on an advance warning system for rockets, Israel has refused to supply weaponry to the country, even if only for defensive purposes such as missile interception. This is seen as a policy largely aimed at avoiding antagonizing Moscow. Russia currently controls much of the skies over Syria, where Israel requires freedom to operate in order to prevent Iran and its proxies from entrenching themselves.

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