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Noam Bedein is 24. After a year of seminary study, three years of Israel Army service on the Lebanese border and a year's trek around Asia, moved to Sderot to study at the business school at the Sapir College Branch of Ben Gurion University and has started work at the new Sderot Media Information Center for the Western Negev region of Israel.
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Why do parents have to sue the government to protect their kids from missiles?
By Noam Bedein   February 11, 2007


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Court room "Gimel" of the Israel High Court of Justice provided a surreal scene when, one day last week, three parents from Sderot Parents Association petitioned the Israel High Court of Justice to demand a court order for the government of Israel to provide full protection for all 24 educational institutions in the city of Sderot.

Joining in the suit was the legal counsel of the Western Negev "Shaar HaNegev" Regional Council.

Following more than 1,300 missile attacks on Sderot and the western Negev since the Disengagement, the surprising policy of the Israeli government is to leave their schools only partially protected.

Indeed, during the one hour that the court met in special session, Arabs fired three more missiles at populated areas of the western Negev, while the British Foreign Secretary, on a special visit to Israel, praised the Israeli government for its restraint in the wake of more than 100 missile attacks on Israeli population centers since Israel declared a unilateral cease fire on Nov. 26, 2006.

While missile attacks continue unabated, the Israeli civil defense command submitted a report to the court that it had decided to provide the proper protection ONLY for the first, second and third grades of the schools in Sderot and the other schools in the Western Negev, leaving other grades unprotected.

In court, the young lawyer who appeared on behalf of the Israeli governement, Raanan Giladi, stated that the Israeli government should NOT protect school children after third grade, since the Israel Civil Defense Command had determined that children had a fifteen second warning from the time the siren sounds until the missile hits for them to run for cover in the safe areas of the school.

Following Giladi's defense of this limited government protection policy, an official of the Israel Civil Defense Command, Michel Levy, testified that they had tested "trial runs" and that they had determined that 15 seconds was enough time for the children to take cover.

Levy "forgot" to mention in these trial runs, Israeli combat soldiers had run the fifteen seconds to safe spots in the schools, not 30 or 40 children who would have to scramble out of their chairs in their classrooms and run out of the one classroom door in search of a safe spot.

One of the Sderot parents, Alon Davidi, told the court that that he and his wife, as parents of five children in the Sderot schools, wanted to have minimal confidence that when he sent off his kids to school in the morning to classrooms that were safe, no matter how old his children were.

Judge Dorit Beinish, Chief Justice of the Israel Supreme Court, presiding at this special session of the Israel High Court of Justice, stated that the government's argument was not convincing and asked how long would it take to provide a program to protect all of the schools.

Giladi asked for 45 days to provide a proposal in this regard, Tparents association asked why this would take so long. Beinish gave the two sides two weeks in which to meet and to discuss a formula for full protection of the schools, to which Israel Civil Defense official Mishel Levy responded once again that "full protection is not necessary -- we are working on the concept of safe areas in the schools."

Beinish concluded the court hearing with an unusual appeal to the government of Israel -- to reconsider its policy of not providing full protection to the school children of Sderot and the Western Negev.

Judge Beinish asked that the Sderot parents association to use the next two weeks to provide the government with a precise list of what schools and what classrooms still need protection.

Meanwhile, two other representatives of the Sderot Parents Association -- Batya Kedar and Chava Gad -- were interviewed by the legal affairs correspondent of the Israel government Voice of Israel radio network. Kedar and Gad took their message to the people. Kedar and Gad spoke as "mothers of children under fire," and asked that people demand that the Israeli government provide minimum protection for their children under fire. Kedar and Gad told the radio that they will spend the better part of the next two weeks preparing a thorough comprehensive report that will document the minimal security needs for the schools of Sderot.

It will be instructive to see if the Israel Civil Service Command, which remains firm in its opposition to providing any further protection for the schools, will be overruled.

Asked for comment on the Israel government policy to encourage children over the age of eight to run for cover in fifteen seconds during an impending missile attack the head of the Israel Council for the Protection of the Child, Dr. Yitzkak Kadman, wrote that "it is admirable that the Israeli government want to institute a new physical education curriclum to see how fast children can run. Perhaps this new curriculum should not be instituted during missile attacks on Sderot."


Reprinted with permission from Sderot Media Center.

Views expressed by the author do not necessarily reflect those of israelinsider.


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