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Israel

Crackdown on 'Orthodox' women who shirk IDF

December 3, 2009 14:12
Forty per cent of Israeli women get out of military service citing “religion and conscience”. This is far higher than the proportion of religious women in the general population.  A new law aims to clamp down on those obtaining a fraudulent exemption

ByAnshel Pfeffer, Anshel Pfeffer

1 min read

A law enabling the IDF to crack down on women who defer army service fraudulently “for religious reasons” has become a political hot potato and may cause a coalition crisis.

Coalition partners Shas and United Torah Judaism (UTJ) have said they will be voting against a government-approved law that will enable the IDF to send investigators to check whether young women who do not join the army claiming they were religious are indeed leading a religious life.

If they are not, the IDF will be able to draft them immediately.

While army service is compulsory in Israel for men and women, about 40 per cent of 18-year-old women do not serve in the military for reasons of “religion and conscience”. This is a higher number than the proportion of religious and strictly Orthodox in the general Israeli population.