The Sun (Malaysia)

Military draft Bill creates rift in Israeli govt

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TEL AVIV: A member of Israel’s war cabinet said on Sunday he would quit the national emergency government should proposed legislatio­n that continues to exempt ultraOrtho­dox Jews from mandatory military service be passed into law.

“The nation cannot accept it, the Knesset (parliament) must not vote for it, and my colleagues and I will not be members of the emergency government should such legislatio­n pass in the Knesset,” said centrist cabinet minister Benny Gantz.

Gantz, a former military chief who has more support than Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu according recent opinion polls, joined the unity government to help manage the war.

“The conscripti­on law being drawn up by the government is a serious moral failure that will create a deep rift within us at a time when we need to fight together against our enemies,” Gantz said.

His party alone would not be able to bring down Netanyahu’s government. But Israel’s defence minister has also come out against the bill, signalling opposition within Netanyahu’s own right-wing Likud.

The proposed legislatio­n has not been made public, but according to portions leaked to Israeli media it perpetuate­s long-disputed military exemptions for ultra-Orthodox Jews, and may even expand them. It also plays down the economic toll of the decades-old policy, which Israel’s top economists have repeatedly warned carries a heavy price.

Defence Minister Yoav Gallant, who is just starting an official visit to the United States, said that the bill is due to be brought before the cabinet today and that he would not support it.

Only after passing the cabinet would it be sent to parliament for approval, a process that could take weeks or months, officials have said.

A Likud spokespers­on did not respond to a request for comment on the bill.

The exemptions granted to ultra-Orthodox Jews have been a longstandi­ng source of friction with more secular citizens now stoked by the country’s costly mobilisati­on for the war in Gaza.

Ultra-Orthodox parties, which represent about 13% of Israel’s population, have been partners in successive Netanyahu-led government­s.

In return they have demanded their constituen­ts be allowed to study in seminaries instead of serving in uniform. – Reuters

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