The government's decision to adopt the Mor Yosef report for the rehabilitation of wounded IDF soldiers was removed from the agenda, Channel 14 reported. Journalist Hadar Miller criticized the move, saying the state cannot abandon those who fought and witnessed the hardest scenes.
The government's decision to adopt the Mor Yosef report—which would have allocated a rehabilitation budget for wounded IDF soldiers—was removed from the agenda, Channel 14 reported Wednesday. The move leaves wounded soldiers without a budget for rehabilitation. Journalist Hadar Miller, speaking live on the channel, accused the government of abandoning those who fought and witnessed the hardest scenes, and warned against making the issue a political football tied to the election campaign. The development comes as Israeli media reported earlier this month that the government had not allocated a budget for post-trauma care for soldiers after three years of war.
- DevelopingNo budget for IDF post-trauma care after three years of war, Israeli media report
- StrongGovernment blocks reform for disabled IDF veterans, reports say
- DevelopingIDF Disabled Veterans Group Accuses Treasury of Seeking Cuts to Benefits, Including PTSD Recognition
- StrongState Comptroller report details IDF-MDA evacuation failure on Oct 7
Source and signal
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