-
Finally! India break toss jinx as Rahul gets lucky
-
Will EU give ground on 2035 combustion-engine ban?
-
England nemesis Starc stretches Australia lead in Gabba Ashes Test
-
Banana skin 'double whammy' derails McIlroy at Australian Open
-
Epic Greaves double ton earns West Indies draw in first NZ Test
-
Thunder roll to 14th straight NBA win, Celtics beat depleted Lakers
-
Myanmar citizens head to early polls in Bangkok
-
Starvation fears as more heavy rain threaten flood-ruined Indonesia
-
Sri Lanka unveils cyclone aid plan as rains persist
-
Avatar 3 aims to become end-of-year blockbuster
-
Contenders plot path to 2026 World Cup glory after Trump steals show at draw
-
Greaves leads dramatic West Indies run chase in NZ Test nail-biter
-
World record-holders Walsh, Smith grab wins at US Open
-
Ukraine, US to meet for third day, agree 'real progress' depends on Russia
-
Double wicket strike as New Zealand eye victory over West Indies
-
New Memoir In Pursuit of Glory Exposes the High-Stakes Journey to from Laborer to Executive Leadership in a Male-Dominated Industry
-
Peace medal and YMCA: Trump steals the show at World Cup draw
-
NBA legend Jordan in court as NASCAR anti-trust case begins
-
How coaches reacted to 2026 World Cup draw
-
Glasgow down Sale as Stomers win at Bayonne in Champions Cup
-
Trump takes aim at Europe in new security strategy
-
Witness in South Africa justice-system crimes probe shot dead
-
Tuchel urges England not to get carried away plotting route to World Cup glory
-
Russian ambassador slams EU frozen assets plan for Ukraine
-
2026 World Cup draw is kind to favorites as Trump takes limelight
-
WHO chief upbeat on missing piece of pandemic treaty
-
US vaccine panel upends hepatitis B advice in latest Trump-era shift
-
Ancelotti says Brazil have 'difficult' World Cup group with Morocco
-
Kriecmayr wins weather-disrupted Beaver Creek super-G
-
Ghostwriters, polo shirts, and the fall of a landmark pesticide study
-
Mixed day for global stocks as market digest huge Netflix deal
-
Fighting erupts in DR Congo a day after peace deal signed
-
England boss Tuchel wary of 'surprise' in World Cup draw
-
10 university students die in Peru restaurant fire
-
'Sinners' tops Critics Choice nominations
-
Netflix's Warner Bros. acquisition sparks backlash
-
France probes mystery drone flight over nuclear sub base
-
Frank Gehry: five key works
-
US Supreme Court to weigh Trump bid to end birthright citizenship
-
Frank Gehry, master architect with a flair for drama, dead at 96
-
'It doesn't make sense': Trump wants to rename American football
-
A day after peace accord signed, shelling forces DRC locals to flee
-
Draw for 2026 World Cup kind to favorites as Trump takes center stage
-
Netflix to buy Warner Bros. in deal of the decade
-
US sanctions equate us with drug traffickers: ICC dep. prosecutor
-
Migration and crime fears loom over Chile's presidential runoff
-
French officer charged after police fracture woman's skull
-
Fresh data show US consumers still strained by inflation
-
Eurovision reels from boycotts over Israel
-
Trump takes centre stage as 2026 World Cup draw takes place
| RBGPF | 0% | 78.35 | $ | |
| CMSD | -0.3% | 23.25 | $ | |
| GSK | -0.33% | 48.41 | $ | |
| AZN | 0.17% | 90.18 | $ | |
| NGG | -0.66% | 75.41 | $ | |
| SCS | -0.56% | 16.14 | $ | |
| RELX | -0.55% | 40.32 | $ | |
| CMSC | -0.21% | 23.43 | $ | |
| BTI | -1.81% | 57.01 | $ | |
| BCC | -1.66% | 73.05 | $ | |
| JRI | 0.29% | 13.79 | $ | |
| RIO | -0.92% | 73.06 | $ | |
| BP | -3.91% | 35.83 | $ | |
| BCE | 1.4% | 23.55 | $ | |
| RYCEF | -0.34% | 14.62 | $ | |
| VOD | -1.31% | 12.47 | $ |
'Better to go to prison': Israeli ultra-Orthodox rally against army service
Tens of thousands of ultra-Orthodox Jewish men rallied in Jerusalem on Thursday to protest against military conscription for their community, an issue that has caused a major strain in Israel's right-wing ruling coalition.
The vast crowd were demonstrating to demand a law guaranteeing their right to avoid Israel's mandatory military service -- long promised by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Crowds of men set fire to pieces of tarpaulin as hundreds of police officers cordoned off several roads across the city, AFP correspondents reported.
Demonstrators packed onto the tops of buildings, petrol stations, bridges and balconies above a sea of fellow protesters, some of whom held signs declaring: "Better to go to prison than to the army."
A helicopter flew overhead as people gathered to take part in collective prayers.
Abraham, 27, who studies in a Jerusalem religious seminary known as a yeshiva and declined to give his full name, said the goal was to preserve a lifestyle lived according to the Torah, the Jewish holy text.
"We don't go to the army not because we are selfish, but because we try to preserve ourselves, what the Torah tells us and the rabbis tell us," he told AFP.
"There were hostages, and we mourned their deaths, we prayed for them three times a day, and for the soldiers," he said, referring to the captives abducted during Hamas's October 2023 attack on Israel, which triggered the war in Gaza.
"We love everyone, secular people, soldiers.... We don't hate anyone. We came to unify the ultra-Orthodox community, that only wants to honour God."
Israeli police said one man fell from a height during Thursday's rally and was subsequently pronounced dead by medical personnel.
- Crackdown -
The mass demonstration follows a recent crackdown on ultra-Orthodox draft dodgers, with thousands of call-up notices ignored in recent months and several deserters imprisoned.
Under a ruling established at the time of Israel's creation in 1948, when the ultra-Orthodox were a very small community, men who devote themselves full-time to the study of sacred Jewish texts are given a de facto pass from army service.
This exemption has come under mounting pressure since the start of the war in Gaza, as the military struggles to fill its ranks.
Whether the exemption should be scrapped has been a long-running point of contention in Israeli society, with Netanyahu pledging that his government would pass a law enshrining the waiver.
But he has so far failed to deliver.
Responding to the call of two ultra-Orthodox parties -- one of which forms a key part of the ruling coalition -- men travelled from all over Israel to join Thursday's rally.
Police announced the mobilisation of 2,000 officers in Jerusalem.
Knesset member and key opposition figure Avigdor Liberman denounced the rally.
"The draft evasion protest is a disgrace to the country's leadership and a spit in the face of our heroic soldiers!" he wrote on X.
In June 2024, the supreme court ruled that the state must draft ultra-Orthodox men, declaring their exemption had expired.
A parliamentary committee is now discussing a bill expected to end the exemptions and encourage young ultra-Orthodox men who are not studying full-time to enlist.
- Vital support for coalition -
The issue has placed Netanyahu's coalition -- one of the most right-wing in the country's history -- under severe strain.
In July, ministers from the ultra-Orthodox Shas party resigned from the cabinet over the issue, though the party has not formally left the coalition.
The other ultra-Orthodox party, United Torah Judaism, has already quit both the government and the coalition.
The Sephardic Shas, which holds 11 seats in the 120-member Knesset, has warned that unless military service exemptions are anchored in law, it will withdraw its support -- a move that could topple Netanyahu's fragile coalition, now down to 60 seats.
Some ultra-Orthodox rabbis fear that conscription will make young people less religious, but others accept that those who do not study holy texts full-time can enlist.
Ultra-Orthodox Jews make up 14 percent of Israel's Jewish population, or about 1.3 million people, and roughly 66,000 men of military age currently benefit from the exemption.
According to an army report presented to parliament in September, there has been a sharp increase in the number of ultra-Orthodox Jews enlisting despite opposition from their leaders, but the numbers still remain low, at a few hundred over the past two years.
E.Rodriguez--AT