A fatal incident during mass demonstrations against mandatory military service for ultra-Orthodox Jews has resulted in one death and multiple injuries in Jerusalem. Emergency services confirmed an 18-year-old male was pronounced dead at the scene after being struck by a bus during Tuesday’s protests against proposed conscription legislation.
The tragic event occurred as thousands of Haredi Jewish demonstrators gathered to oppose ending their longstanding exemption from military service. According to Magen David Adom emergency responders, the bus initially injured three pedestrians before continuing and striking the teenager, who became trapped beneath the vehicle.
Police reports indicate the protest turned violent when a segment of demonstrators began disrupting public order through traffic blockades, property damage, and assaults on law enforcement and journalists. Authorities stated the bus driver was arrested but claimed he had been assaulted by protesters prior to the incident. Israeli security sources have explicitly ruled out terrorism as a motive.
The demonstrations reflect deepening societal tensions as Israel faces military manpower shortages following two years of multi-front conflicts. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu navigates competing pressures between opposition demands for expanded conscription and ultra-Orthodox coalition partners who traditionally oppose drafting religious students.
This longstanding exemption, established since Israel’s founding in 1948, allows yeshiva students dedicated to Jewish textual study to avoid mandatory service. However, the policy faces increasing scrutiny amid ongoing military mobilizations, despite the fragile Gaza truce.
The political stakes are substantial for Netanyahu’s government, as ultra-Orthodox parties constitute 14% of Israel’s Jewish population and are essential to maintaining his right-wing coalition’s parliamentary majority. The government’s stability has already been tested by previous conscription legislation, with the United Torah Judaism party exiting the coalition and reducing its seats to 60 out of 120.
This incident marks the second protest-related death in recent months, following a teenage suicide during similar demonstrations in October.
