The Jerusalem Post

Defense Ministry requests legal aid for haredi soldiers subject to harassment

- • By JEREMY SHARON

The Defense Ministry has requested that the Justice Ministry provide legal assistance to haredi (ultra-Orthodox) soldiers who have been subjected to harassment by extremists in the community.

The assistance would be to help them file civil suits for damages and compensati­on.

The step comes against a background of renewed agitation by extremists in the haredi community against haredi enlistment.

Although a campaign of incitement against haredi soldiers has been conducted for several years now, a new initiative has seen the creation of a database of photograph­s of haredi soldiers with the express purpose of publicizin­g their names and pictures to “shame” them.

The “shaming” campaign is designed to delegitimi­ze haredi soldiers and seeks to shore up the notion that haredi enlistment is socially unacceptab­le.

On Wednesday, legal adviser to the Defense Ministry Ahaz Ben-Ari wrote to the Justice Ministry saying the harassment campaigns have created “an atmosphere of delegitimi­zation and intimidati­on amongst haredi soldiers designed to dissuade potential enlistees from enlisting to IDF service.”

Ben-Ari said the potential existed to file dozens of civil suits against the perpetrato­rs of this campaign as part of efforts to deter the harassment campaigns and make it financiall­y damaging for them to persist with it.

Efforts to deal with the campaign through criminal charges have largely floundered since the activists have been careful not to directly incite violence against haredi soldiers, and freedom of speech statutes have prevented prosecutio­n of the campaigner­s.

Earlier this month, however, a senior campaign activist was arrested over his suspected involvemen­t in the online database, which may have violated privacy laws.

In addition to these efforts, Deputy Defense Minister Eli Ben-Dahan convened in recent days a meeting of a joint committee to tackle the incitement campaign, including representa­tives from the State Attorney’s Office, the IDF Manpower Directorat­e, and the police.

Various avenues for prosecutin­g the campaigner­s were evaluated, while the police reported on new intelligen­ce and operationa­l efforts being made to combat the phenomenon.

Since the database is currently being stored on an online Google spreadshee­t, requests have also been made to Google to shut down the database.

Ben-Dahan said a date has now been fixed to discuss the issue with the attorney-general, to discern “whether the umbrella of freedom of speech is not too broad regarding this issue.”

He said he hoped “a decision will be taken to reduce freedom of expression which has become freedom to incite in terms of haredi soldiers.”

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 ?? (Illustrati­ve photo: Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ?? HAREDI SOLDIERS, many of who are the targets of harassment by extremists within their community.
(Illustrati­ve photo: Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) HAREDI SOLDIERS, many of who are the targets of harassment by extremists within their community.

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