Teenager dies during ultra-Orthodox protest in Jerusalem

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Thousands of Ultra-Orthodox Jews gather on the day they rally in a \"million man\" protest against Israeli military conscription in Jerusalem October 30, 2025. REUTERS/Ammar Awad

Thousands of Ultra-Orthodox Jews rallying against military conscription in Jerusalem on Oct 30.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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A mass ultra-Orthodox Jewish rally against military conscription turned deadly in Jerusalem on Oct 30, when a teenage boy fell to his death during the demonstration, which had shut down the main entrance to the city.

Packed crowds of mostly men clogged the roads around the Route 1 highway leading into Jerusalem.

Israeli media outlets estimated that around 200,000 people flocked to the rally. Photos showed some had climbed atop roofs of buildings and a gas station, and onto cranes.

The Israeli ambulance service said a 15-year-old fell to his death, and police said they had opened an investigation into the incident.

The debate over mandatory military service, and those who are exempt from it, has long caused tensions within Israel’s deeply divided society and has placed Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu under

increasing political strain

over the past year.

Ultra-Orthodox seminary students have long been exempt from mandatory military service.

Many Israelis fume at what they see as an unfair burden carried by the mainstream who serve.

That frustration only intensified during wars over the past two years that exacted the highest Israeli military death toll in decades as fighting stretched from the Gaza Strip to Lebanon, Syria, Yemen and Iran.

This has added fuel to an already explosive debate over a new conscription Bill that lies at the centre of a crisis rattling Mr Netanyahu’s coalition, which took power in late 2022 for a four-year term.

Ultra-Orthodox Jewish leaders say full-time devotion to the study of holy scriptures is sacrosanct and fear their young men will drift away from religious life if they are drafted into the military.

“Right now, people who refuse to go to the army are taken to military prison,” said Mr Shmuel Orbach, a protester. “It’s not so bad. But we are a Jewish country. You cannot fight against Judaism in a Jewish country, it does not work.”

But in 2024, the Supreme Court ordered an end to the exemption.

Parliament has been struggling to draft a new conscription Bill, which has so far failed to meet both the ultra-Orthodox demands and those of a stretched military.

Two long-time loyal political allies, ultra-Orthodox Jewish parties Shas and United Torah Judaism, quit Mr Netanyahu’s coalition government in July in a dispute over the new military draft legislation.

Their exit left Mr Netanyahu with an increasingly splintered coalition whose far-right members are unhappy about

Israel’s ceasefire deal

with Gaza’s dominant Palestinian militant group Hamas, brokered by the United States.

The door has been left open for the ultra-Orthodox parties to rejoin the coalition should the dispute be resolved.

But reaching an accommodation acceptable to ultra-Orthodox political leaders may alienate many other Israelis as the country heads into an election year, and risks being shot down by the Supreme Court.

Surveys over the past two years have consistently predicted Mr Netanyahu’s coalition would lose the next ballot. REUTERS

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