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Jewish party vows to quit Israel gov't over army bill

June 15, 2018 at 4:31 pm

A group of Ultra Orthodox Jews hold placards as they stage a protest against compulsory military service on 20 March 2017 [Gil Cohen Magen/Anadolu Agency]

United Torah Judaism (UTJ), a right-wing Jewish religious party, has vowed to withdraw from Israel’s governing coalition if the Knesset approves a draft law on compulsory military service, reports Anadolu Agency.

“The crisis over the military service draft law has returned again to haunt the governing coalition and threaten its stability,” the Israeli Broadcasting Corp. reported Friday.

It went on to point out that the Council of Torah Sages (CTS), a rabbinical policy-making body, had instructed the UTJ’s six MPs to withdraw from Israel’s governing coalition if the Knesset approved an amended version of the draft law.

READ: Israeli government approves controversial conscription bill

“The CTS of Agudat Yisrael, the Hasidic faction of UTJ, has instructed its representatives in the Knesset to quit the [governing] coalition if the draft law is passed – unless it is done in coordination with them and with their approval,” Israeli daily Yedioth Ahronoth reported Thursday evening.

The newspaper noted that the country’s current military service law was set to expire in September “so the Knesset must pass an alternative law before then”.

READ: Israel police and ultra-orthodox Jews clash over conscription

“If a new law is not passed to ensure the exemption of Ultra-Orthodox yeshiva students [from military service], tens of thousands of them will likely receive Israeli Defense Forces draft orders,” the paper asserted.

According to Yedioth Ahronoth, the CTS has ordered its MPs “to work on amending the proposed legislation and ensure that Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman maintains the authority to exempt yeshiva students from the IDF draft”.

#Knesset

However, Israel’s Channel 10 recently quoted Lieberman as saying that he would not retreat from the draft’s current wording.

Army service is mandatory for all Israeli citizens (three years for men and two years for women), with the exception of members of the Ultra-Orthodox Jewish community.

Ultra-Orthodox Jews account for roughly 10 per cent of Israel’s total population. They tend to live in closed communities and adhere to strict interpretations of Jewish religious law.