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Netanyhau seeks call-up delay for Orthodox to save coalition

Conscription of Haredi has precipitated a protracted crisis in which five elections were held in under four years.

Ultra-Orthodox Jews clash with riot police in Jerusalem. Picture: Getty Images
Ultra-Orthodox Jews clash with riot police in Jerusalem. Picture: Getty Images

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has asked Israel’s top court for a new delay on compulsory military service for ultra-Orthodox Jews, an issue that has put his ruling coalition at risk.

Conscription of ultra-Orthodox men or Haredi is a divisive issue in Israeli politics, precipitating a protracted crisis in which five elections were held in under four years.

Ultra-Orthodox men are facing the possibility of being called up from Monday, as Israel’s war against Hamas militants rages in the Gaza Strip.

But Mr Netanyahu, who has depended on the support of ultra-Orthodox parties in successive coalition governments, asked the Supreme Court to delay a deadline for coming up with a conscription proposal. He wants a 30-day delay to allow more time to devise an agreement with his ultra-Orthodox coalition partners, who are fiercely opposed to conscription for their community.

Protesters demand equality in military service near the Prime Minister’s office in Jerusalem this week. Picture: Getty Images
Protesters demand equality in military service near the Prime Minister’s office in Jerusalem this week. Picture: Getty Images

Attorney-General Gali Baharav-Miara argued against a delay on Thursday, telling the court that conscription needed to begin by Monday.

The court issued an interim ruling on Thursday saying that Jewish seminaries would lose funding if students without deferrals or exemptions did not report for military service. A hearing will be scheduled for sometime in May to hear arguments against making the order final.

Netanyahu ally Aryeh Deri called the ruling “a mark of Cain and unprecedented cruelty” for seminary students.

As tens of thousands of reservists have been called up for the war in Gaza, pressure has increased on the country’s large and growing ultra-Orthodox community who have long been exempt from military service even though it is compulsory for nearly all other Jewish men in Israel.

Israeli Defense Minister Yoav last month announced a reform of military service that would include the ultra-Orthodox. Picture: AFP
Israeli Defense Minister Yoav last month announced a reform of military service that would include the ultra-Orthodox. Picture: AFP

Mr Netanyahu is working to avoid an early election that might benefit Benny Gantz, a centrist member of his war cabinet. Polls suggest that if there were an election, Mr Gantz’s party would win the largest number of seats.

Before the war, the religious parties had supported Mr Netanyahu’s judicial reforms, in the hope of further extending military exemptions. The judicial revamp sparked months of protests.

But Defence Minister Yoav Gallant last month announced a reform of military service that would include the ultra-Orthodox. Some Israeli media perceived Mr Gallant’s move as a challenge to Mr Netanyahu. Both men belong to the Likud party.

Military service is obligatory for young Israelis – 32 months for men, and two years for women.

Israeli troops on the ground in the Gaza Strip this week. Picture: AFP
Israeli troops on the ground in the Gaza Strip this week. Picture: AFP

But almost all the ultra-Orthodox have been able to escape it, with 66,000 members of the community excused from military service last year alone.

Jewish men who study the Torah full-time in seminaries have long been granted an annual deferment from military service until the age of 26, at which point they become exempt. Young ultra-Orthodox women are automatically exempt.

The exemptions date from ­Israel’s founding in 1948, and were meant to allow a group of 400 young people to study sacred texts and preserve Jewish traditions put at risk by the Holocaust.

Today, the ultra-Orthodox number 1.3 million people – bolstered by a fertility rate of more than six children per woman, which far exceeds the national ­average of 2.5. Most ultra-Orthodox want the exemptions to be ­extended to all religious students, saying serving in the military is incompatible with their values.

AFP

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Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/netanyhau-seeks-callup-delay-for-orthodox-to-save-coalition/news-story/2125d13cda745f85139e4e9124360b60