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Taliban continues to brutalize Afghan women, MSF staff member detained by regime

The Taliban has been accused of using excessive force against protesters and detaining women in Afghanistan for alleged violations of Islamic dress codes. According to the United Nations, NGOs, and international media, at least 30 women were arrested in the western city of Herat. Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) reported that one of their staff members was detained for two days in early June after being stopped by officials from the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice Ministry. The staff member was released after signing a commitment to follow the Taliban's dress code. Protests erupted in

Inside Story

Yeshiva students are blocking roads and breaking into police stations as Haredi parties hold coalition’s legislative agenda hostage. PM said to be considering halting detentions

By Sam Sokol

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Today, 10:20 pm

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Sam Sokol is the Times of Israel's political correspondent. He was previously a reporter for the Jerusalem Post, Jewish Telegraphic Agency and Haaretz. He is the author of "Putin’s Hybrid War and the Jews"

Angered by government efforts to detain draft evaders, Israel’s ultra-Orthodox community has risen in revolt in recent weeks, threatening to derail Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s legislative agenda while simultaneously bringing chaos to the country’s streets through a series of increasingly violent demonstrations.

The arrests ramped up last month after police announced that they would begin detaining draft evaders they had previously allowed to go free, in line with a recent court ruling.

Over the past two years, the military has sent out tens of thousands of enlistment orders to members of the ultra-Orthodox community whose exemptions from mandatory service in the Israel Defense Forces were revoked under a 2024 High Court ruling. Most have ignored the orders, leading to large numbers of young men being classified as evaders and made subject to arrest or other sanctions.

Some 80,000 ultra-Orthodox men aged between 18 and 24 are currently believed to be eligible for military service, but have not enlisted, despite a persistent IDF manpower shortage.

The police’s decision to ramp up enforcement came only days after the Knesset’s Haredi factions announced that they would seek to dissolve the Knesset and trigger early elections over the coalition’s failure to pass a controversial law restoring yeshiva students’ draft exemptions.

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Since then, ultra-Orthodox lawmakers have ramped up their rhetoric, threatening a tax revolt ; calling on police to disobey orders ; demanding local authorities halt cooperation with law enforcement; and even threatening to go after Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara — a major proponent of enforcement operations — “ with sticks and stones .”

Chaos in the streets

This rhetoric has been accompanied by action by members of the ultra-Orthodox community, especially those affiliated with the so-called hardline Jerusalem Faction, who have taken to the streets in an effort to block the arrests .

Police drag away ultra-Orthodox protesters blocking the road outside the Abu Kabir detention facility in Tel Aviv on June 10, 2026, during a protest against the arrest of suspected participants outside the June 3 riot outside the home of Supreme Court Justice Noam Sohlberg. (Chaim Goldberg/Flash90)

On Wednesday morning, Haredi protesters blocked traffic near the central Israeli city of Bnei Brak, during an anti-draft demonstration that became violent, with police using stun grenades and batons to disperse participants.

Later on in the day, thousands of Haredi demonstrators from a different sect gathered outside the IDF’s Beit Lid military prison to protest the arrest of an ultra-Orthodox draft evader being held at the facility.

In recent weeks, Haredi demonstrators smashed windows while trying to enter Supreme Court Deputy Chief Justice Noam Sohlberg’s house during a riot, forced their way into a police compound in Beit Shemesh, and broke into the home of the Military Police chief while his family was inside.

Haredi radicals also recently attempted to break into a police station in Jerusalem’s Russian Compound.

A legislative boycott

At the same time that radicals have taken to the streets, the Haredi political leadership has engaged in a parallel political effort, pushing a series of bills intended to reduce draft dodgers’ sentences , equate Torah study with military service , and restore benefits for draft evaders cut by the government.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Minister and MKs attend a plenum session and a vote on reviving the ultra-Orthodox draft exemption bill at the assembly hall of the Knesset, in Jerusalem, on June 11, 2024. (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

On Tuesday, members of the Knesset House Committee vote unanimously to refer a proposed Basic Law declaring Torah study a foundational value of the State of Israel to the Knesset Constitution, Law and Justice Committee.

The bill, which was approved in a preliminary reading in the full Knesset plenum last week, is aimed at defining those who dedicate themselves to long-term Torah study as performing “meaningful service” to the state, effectively equating it to army service and conferring upon yeshiva students equal rights to those who serve in the army.

According to Channel 12…

Read the full article at The Times of Israel
Source document: High Court ruling on draft exemptions

2 reports

The Times of IsraelIndependentCenter2 days ago
Enraged by arrests of draft evaders, Israel’s ultra-Orthodox community is in revolt

Israel's ultra-Orthodox community has erupted in protest against government efforts to arrest draft evaders, leading to road blockages, police station break-ins, and threats to disrupt Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's legislative agenda. The protests intensified after police began enforcing a court ruling to detain individuals who had previously been allowed to avoid military service. Over the past two years, the military has issued tens of thousands of enlistment orders to ultra-Orthodox citizens following a 2024 High Court decision that revoked their exemptions.

Bias read (Center): The article presents the situation objectively without overtly favoring either side. It describes the actions of the ultra-Orthodox community, the government's enforcement of the court ruling, and the resulting unrest without using biased language or selectively emphasizing one perspective over the.

Official sources cited

The Jerusalem PostIndependentCenter7 days ago
Taliban continues to brutalize Afghan women, MSF staff member detained by regime

The Taliban has been accused of using excessive force against protesters and detaining women in Afghanistan for alleged violations of Islamic dress codes. According to the United Nations, NGOs, and international media, at least 30 women were arrested in the western city of Herat. Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) reported that one of their staff members was detained for two days in early June after being stopped by officials from the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice Ministry. The staff member was released after signing a commitment to follow the Taliban's dress code. Protests erupted in

Bias read (Center): The article presents factual information without overtly biased language or framing. It cites multiple sources including the United Nations, NGOs, and international media, indicating an attempt to provide balanced reporting. There is no clear indication of favoring one side over another in the event

Official sources cited

  • organisation United Nations
  • organisation NGOs
  • organisation International media

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