Site icon Middle East Monitor

Ultra-Orthodox Jews protest compulsory military service in Tel Aviv

48 minutes ago
Security forces intervene the Ultra-Orthodox Jews, also known as Haredim as they gather to stage a protest against the compulsory military service in West Jerusalem on June 30, 2024. [Mostafa Alkharouf - Anadolu Agency]

Security forces intervene the Ultra-Orthodox Jews, also known as Haredim as they gather to stage a protest against the compulsory military service in West Jerusalem on June 30, 2024. [Mostafa Alkharouf - Anadolu Agency]

Dozens of ultra-Orthodox Jews demonstrated outside a recruitment base near Tel Aviv on Monday against compulsory military service, Anadolu Agency reports.

According to the public broadcaster, KAN, the protest took place in the Tel Hashomer neighbourhood against the conscription of students of religious institutions.

KAN said the Israeli army lowered its expectations of the recruitment of ultra-Orthodox Jews to a minimum, as fewer than 1,000 Haredi students responded to over 10,000 military draft orders.

The army was planning to enlist 280 soldiers within the Hashmonaim Brigade, a special infantry unit for Haredi, but it reduced the number to only 80 due to a lack of volunteers.

The Haredi community, which accounts for roughly 13 per cent of Israel’s 10 million population, has continued to protest conscription following a Supreme Court rulings on 25 June, 2024, mandating their enlistment and halting funding for yeshivas (religious schools) whose students refuse service.

READ: Ex-Israel PM accuses Netanyahu of waging war on Israel

Haredim argue that Torah study is their primary duty and that integration into secular society threatens their religious identity.

For decades, Haredi men have evaded conscription at age 18 through repeated deferrals tied to yeshiva enrolment, until reaching the exemption age of 26.

The opposition accuses Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, of pushing for a new law to restore Haredi exemptions to satisfy coalition partners Shas and United Torah Judaism, risking government collapse.

The draft-dodging comes as the Israeli army resumed its assault on Gaza on 18 March, shattering a 19 January ceasefire and prisoner exchange agreement.

Israel has killed more than 52,200 Palestinians in the enclave since October 2023, most of them women and children.

The International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants in November for Netanyahu and his former Defence Minister, Yoav Gallant, for war crimes and crimes against humanity in Gaza.

Israel also faces a genocide case at the International Court of Justice for its war on the enclave.

READ:  Israeli army extends compulsory military service by 4 months amid manpower shortage

Exit mobile version