keni and a few dozen other african refugees had 30 days to prepare themselves. now they're being taken in a bus to holot in southern israel. holot detention center, wasteland, sand, and barbed wire, a bleak place in the middle of the negev desert. since mid-december, african refugees whose residents' permits haven't been extended have been taken here. that now amounts to several hundred asylum-seekers and the camp has just been enlarged to accommodate up to 5,000. holot is what's called an open detention center. inmates can move about freely, but there are strict regulations. here we meet keni again. you and he's having trouble getting used to the camp. there are attendance checks three times a day, at 6:00 a.m., noon, and 10:00 at night. afterward inmates are shut in. the food is bad, he says, no one is allowed to work. boredom reigns. >> life in prison is hard. we sit in there and look for solutions to our problems. there's huge uncertainty. in nobody wants to stay in this prison. you can't do anything in here. and outside, you're lost, because you don't have