The Times of London reports that more than 50% of young British people would welcome a dictatorship, with a third saying that the army should take charge of the country.
Requested Remedies The Honorable Court is hereby requested to issue a conditional order instructing the respondents to appear and provide reasons why:
A. A mandatory mechanism and procedures have not been established to regulate the direct transfer of decisions and judgments from the courts to educational institutions, without reliance on the ability or consent of the parents.
B. The Ministry of Education has not instructed school principals to act immediately to implement court decisions, including the adoption of a detailed internal protocol to ensure full and prompt compliance with all binding decisions.
C. The respondents have not directed all educational personnel to report when a judicial decision is received and to take the necessary measures for its implementation (e.g., reporting to pedagogical authorities, updating the relevant parents, documenting and reporting to the local education authority, etc.).
A petition draft: Before this Honorable Court, a petition is submitted for the issuance of a conditional order and an absolute order against the respondents, due to their ongoing failure to establish an administrative-systemic mechanism for receiving and implementing judicial decisions regarding minors in educational institutions in the State of Israel.
The subject of this petition is not limited to a single isolated case but addresses a dual-layered systemic failure: ○ High-level systemic failure: The absence of a direct and automatic interface between the courts and educational institutions, resulting in judicial decisions concerning minors not reaching the relevant educational authorities in real time. ○ Low-level systemic failure: Even when a judicial decision reaches the principal or a designated official from the Ministry of Education, there is often no internal entity that provides a clear protocol for acting upon such decisions. This leads to non-compliance or delays in the implementation of these decisions.
The described failures primarily harm the minors for whom the judicial decisions are made. They also impact parents, who are forced to act as "messengers" for the courts' decisions or, as the saying goes, to carry "a burden that is not theirs"—a responsibility placed on their shoulders without having the authority or systemic ability to enforce compliance by the educational authorities.
Furthermore, correspondence with the legal advisor of the Ministry of Education suggests that the issue of receiving and embedding judicial decisions within educational institutions has been relegated to the margins of administrative priorities. This is often accompanied by claims against the judiciary itself, alleging that decisions are not "properly delivered." Such a situation is unacceptable, given the fundamental principle of "the law of the land is law," which mandates compliance with and implementation of court decisions, especially when these decisions pertain to minors.
If the Ministry of Education has reservations about the existing arrangements, it is presumed that it would approach this Honorable Court or the Knesset to request legislation or the establishment of an alternative protocol. Instead, the system prefers to impose on parents the duty of conveying judicial decisions to educational institutions, which obligates those very institutions. Regrettably, this creates the impression that the "beneficiary of the chaos" is the executive authority itself, while parents and students suffer from the inefficiency and lack of a proper mechanism.
It's a smokescreen because the system that allows this to happen produces noise, which is supposed to act as a smokescreen for very specific children who are being kidnapped.
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