zaterdag 24 november 2007

Personeelschef IDF: soldaten niet adekwaat beloond voor militaire dienst

"Arabieren in Israël worden systematisch achtergesteld", schreef ik zelf onlangs nog, maar in dit geval gaat dat niet op:

According to Stern, in 1994 there was a law stipulating that a soldier who completed a full military service would receive priority when applying to academic institutions. "During that year," Stern said, "the president of the Technion [Israel Institute for Technology] asked me if I'm aware of the fact that most of the students enrolled in the institution's medical program were Arab."

Referring to the fact that Arab citizens generally do not serve in the IDF, Stern continued "we wanted to give equal opportunities but ended up hurting equality --we ended up giving priority to those who didn't serve their country."

Omdat Arabieren niet in het leger hoeven te dienen en dit (Druzen uitgezonderd) ook zelden doen, hebben zij drie jaar voordeel. Het is fair dat soldaten hiervoor worden gecompenseerd, zodat zij gelijke kansen hebben. Bovendien is het redelijk soldaten op een of andere manier te belonen - zij geven drie jaar van hun leven, en daarna nog tientallen jaren een maand reservedienst per jaar, voor de staat. Het aantal mensen dat in militaire dienst treedt, gaat - ondanks de algemene dienstplicht - gestaag achteruit. De belangrijkste groepen die niet in dienst gaan, beide groeiende vanwege hun hoge geboortecijfer, zijn de ultraorthodoxen en de Arabieren, maar er is ook een groeiende groep die gewoon geen zin heeft en probeert om niet door de keuring te komen.


Ratna
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Last update - 17:48 21/11/2007

IDF personnel chief: Soldiers not adequately rewarded for IDF service 
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/926683.html
By Yuval Azoulay, Haaretz Correspondent 
 
 
The head of the Israel Defense Forces Personnel Directorate said Wednesday that soldiers serving in the IDF are not being adequately rewarded for their service.

Speaking at a conference marking the first anniversary of the death of Major General Abraham Rotem at the Bar Ilan University in Ramat Gan, Major General Elazar Stern lamented the fact that Israelis that served in the IDF are not given priority in university acceptance procedures.

According to Stern, in 1994 there was a law stipulating that a soldier who completed a full military service would receive priority when applying to academic institutions. "During that year," Stern said, "the president of the Technion [Israel Institute for Technology] asked me if I'm aware of the fact that most of the students enrolled in the institution's medical program were Arab."


Referring to the fact that Arab citizens generally do not serve in the IDF, Stern continued "we wanted to give equal opportunities but ended up hurting equality -- we ended up giving priority to those who didn't serve their country."

Stern added that "a senior [in high school], with intense studying, can get a good score on the psychometric [standardized university entry] exam, I don't want to talk about how grades are given in that [Arab] sector, but what happens ultimately is that we're short dozens of potential doctors in the IDF's academic track, whose spots are taken by others, and the law giving priority to soldiers who serve, we've overturned."

Stern said he believed that in ten years, 25 percent of youth eligible for conscription will not enlist due to religious beliefs (as opposed to 11.5 percent today). "The Haredi Nahal unit (an infantry battalion for ultra-Orthodox soldiers) has pulled the rug out from under the Haredi excuse for not serving." Stern added that in the Haredi Nahal, "has provisions like you don't even see in Bnei Brak. There aren't any women for kilometers. The food is Glat Kosher, they are forced to attend prayer, and there is a cloth on the fence so that they can't see a female soldier from a 300 meter distance, even if she's dressed properly."

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