NEWS UPDATE 19 September 2010 Widening Use of Military Service as a Condition for University and Employment Benefits Discriminates against Arab Citizens of Israel
(Haifa, Israel) On 17 August 2010, Adalah sent a letter to the Prime Minister, the Ministers of Education, Finance, and Industry, Trade and Labor, and the Attorney General (AG) demanding that they work to end discrimination against Arab students in Israeli universities and colleges created by several laws which grant significant financial and other benefits to Israeli citizens who perform military service. The letter, prepared by Adalah Attorney Sawsan Zaher, also demanded that the government withdraw its support for laws and regulations which grant socio-economic benefits based solely on the criterion of military service. In general, Palestinian Arab citizens of Israel are exempt from military service and thus they are excluded from receiving these state-allocated benefits. In the letter, Adalah argued that granting benefits based on military service adds to the many obstacles faced by Arab youth in Israel today, limiting their access to higher education and employment in the civil service. The letter followed a recent amendment of the Absorption of Discharged Soldiers Law - 1994, passed by the Knesset on 21 July 2001, as well as a new bill that aims to provide benefits in civil service employment to discharged soldiers. According to the new law, any registered university or college student who has completed his or her military service and is a resident of a designated “National Priority Area” such as the Naqab (Negev) in the south, the Galilee in the north, or the Jewish settlements in the West Bank will be granted a “compensation package” including: full tuition for the first year of academic education; a year of free preparatory academic education; and additional benefits in areas like student housing. In the letter, Attorney Zaher stressed that this benefits package goes far beyond and adds to the already extensive educational benefits package that is enjoyed by discharged soldiers in Israel. These benefits, which are linked directly to compulsory military service, serve as a discriminatory criterion for accepting students into institutions of higher education in Israel. For example, the minimum age for eligibility to most medical schools in Israel is 20 or 21 years old. This rule prevents Arab students from applying to medical school immediately upon graduating from high school at age 18. This age requirement is waived for medical students who delay their compulsory military service until after completing their medical education. Adalah also argued in the letter that the state should grant benefits to students based on socio-economic need, regardless of his or her performance of military service. "Granting additional privileges to discharged soldiers will increase the existing gap in access to higher education between Palestinian and Jewish citizens of Israel," Attorney Zaher stressed. "The increased use of the military and national service as a criterion for benefits is a direct result of the political discourse linking equal citizenship rights to loyalty to the state, as embodied by military service. Politically-motivated discrimination between citizens based on national belonging is unacceptable and must be rejected," Attorney Zaher concluded.
|