About 450 Ethiopians of Jewish
descent have been repatriated to Israel, concluding an Israeli government-backed
scheme to relocate the community.
Their migration was "historic", Israel's Minister of Absorption Sofa Landver
is quoted as saying.
Many members of the Falash Mura community lived in poor conditions in
northern Ethiopia.
The Falash Mura's ancestors converted to Christianity under pressure in the
19th Century.
They have been waging a decades-long campaign to be allowed to settle in
Israel.
'Welcomed'
Their campaign has been plagued by controversy, as some Israelis questioned
their Jewish links while others accused the government of not doing enough to
help them.
In 2010, the Israeli government agreed to resume its
repatriation programme, dubbed Operation Dove's Wings, after it was halted two
years earlier.
The 450 migrants had been living in transit camps in Gondar city in northern
Ethiopia, as they waited to go to Israel.
They were the last of some 8,000 Ethiopians who qualified for repatriation
under the scheme.
The group flew into Israel's Ben Gurion airport in two chartered flights,
with their relatives on hand to welcome them.
"Three years after I advised the prime minister of Israel to bring Operation
Dove's Wings to an end, to close the compound in Gondar and to complete the
journey of organised aliyah [migration] from Ethiopia, I am proud to take part
in this historic event," Ms Landver said, the Jewish Press reports.
Some 12,000 members of the Falash Mura community in Ethiopia have not been
granted permission to move to Israel, the Times of Israel newspaper reports.
About 90,000 Ethiopian Jews have immigrated to Israel since it was founded in
1948.
They make up one of the poorest sections of Israeli society
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