Sunday January 20, 2013
Divisive Austrian referendum on military service
VIENNA: Opinion polls indicate that Austrians will decide Sunday in a referendum to remain one of the very few countries in Europe with compulsory military service.
But with turnout expected to be low, the outcome is uncertain and months of lively debate have divided not only voters but also the coalition government.
With the end of the Cold War two decades ago removing the need for large armies, many countries in Europe have done away with the draft, the latest Germany in 2001.
In Austria though, some fear that moving to a professional military will push the country to join NATO, endangering its cherished neutrality.
At present around 22,000 men over 18 are drafted into six months of military service every year in eight-million-strong European Union member Austria.
Supporters of the status quo say that if conscription goes, it will be tough to attract enough volunteers to keep the size of the army at 55,000 troops.
They also say creating a professional army will be expensive, just as the eurozone member is trying to cut spending.
Interior Minister Johanna Mikl-Leitner of the conservative People's Party (OeVP) equated a change to a "two-billion-euro ($2.7-billion) castle in the sky".
But the defence minister, Norbert Darabos of the Social Democrats, says that the draft is outdated in an era of "counter-terrorism, cybercrime... (and) failed states".
"The nature of the threat has changed, that's why a transformation is necessary," he says.
The army's chief of staff, General Edmund Entacher, has warned however that a professional army would lead "irreversibly to a drop in quality, numbers and ability".
Others argue a reduced force will be less able to respond to natural disasters or participate in international peacekeeping missions abroad as it does now in hotspots including Kosovo and Lebanon.
Another argument in favour of keeping the draft is that at present, 14,000 young men opt out each year and work instead in social services or hospitals.
They thus provide a valuable source of manpower that would be missed if conscription is scrapped, some say.
The referendum has split the government down the middle, with the People's Party backing military service, supported by the far-right Freedom Party.
The Social Democrats of Chancellor Werner Faymann, the Greens and two smaller parliamentary parties want a professional force.
This will be modern Austria's first ever nationwide referendum, and although not binding, the government has vowed to respect the result.
Peter Ulram, political expert at Ecoquest, said however that "this is an interesting promise because the government will need a large enough majority to change the constitution. This it doesn't have".
The latest opinion polls predict that voters will prefer to maintain conscription by about a 10-point margin, although many were still undecided - or do not care.
"The parties' tedious squabbling over the army seems to have left a considerable number of Austrians confused and disinterested," the Spectra polling institute said.
Some 6.3 million Austrians are eligible to vote on Sunday, with preliminary results expected soon after polls close at 5:00 pm (1600 GMT). - AFP
- Student activist arrested for sedition
- Umno probing reports of sabotage by party members during polls
- Guan Eng wants Zahid to retract statement
- Beckham is Star Online readers' pick for best English player
- More tourists to Sabah despite Sulu gunmen intrusion
- No comment on minister post until I’m a Senator, says Wahid
- Ceramah is state function, no permit needed, says Karpal
- Six new faces in Perak exco
- New measures to boost public safety and security
- Cops seek to further reduce crime rate in Klang Valley
- New IGP clocks in early on day one

- Cops need to be more visible and get tough on minor offences

- Community policing reducing crime
- Penang Government and cops headed for showdown
- Thousands gather at Pakatan rally in Seremban
- CEO: Catcha Media won’t be taken private — for now
- Sarawak politically-linked stocks rally
- Jala: GST could add up to RM27bil to country’s income
- Analysts say UMW Holdings’ O&G offering was widely anticipated
- Matrix Concepts’ IPO oversubscribed by 11.3 times
- Instacom wins RM200m job?
- SFSS set to be largest shareholder of Bintulu Port
- Northport buys two new quay cranes
- Bursa Malaysia closes on Friday
- Up close and personal with Rod Young
- Well-planned land transport network can boost Greater KL area
- Will MRT Line 2 go on as planned?
- Big challenges for new Cabinet
- Lessons from ‘The Office’
- Paradigm shift – fundamental change in thinking
- Cycling: Leader Van Garderen wins California time trial
- Golf: Keegan Bradley maintains Byron Nelson lead
- Golf: Korda seizes lead at Mobile Bay LPGA
- Formula One: Increased venom as F1 tyre war erupts again
- Rugby: It's all I have to play for, says Wilkinson
- Doping battle at breaking point
- Cricket: Haq nets record and a duck in Scotland warm-up
- Cricket: Anderson bowls England back into first Test
- NFL: New York Jets rusher Goodson arrested
- Cricket: Heroes' praise too much for 300-up Anderson
- Tennis: Radwanska out of Brussels to aid French Open bid
- Table tennis: Leading Chinese quartet power into last 16 of world meet
- NBA: Kings sold to group led by India's Ranadive for more than US$535mil
- Golf: China's schoolboy Guan stumbles to 77 at US$6.7mil Byron Nelson
- Rugby: Leinster add to Stade agony with European Challenge Cup win
- DAP MP says sorry to voter
- Ahmad Zahid: My statement in Utusan not racist, just practical
- Penang Government and cops headed for showdown
- Global survey claims Malaysians among the least racially tolerant
- New measures to boost public safety and security
- Thousands gather at Pakatan rally in Seremban
- It was Ahmad Zahid’s personal view, says Khairy
- New IGP clocks in early on day one
- Death of wife inspires man to apply for trip to Mars
- Malaysians rubbish survey’s findings
- Tips to consider when picking a business partner
- DAP MP says sorry to voter
- Ahmad Zahid: My statement in Utusan not racist, just practical
- Well-planned land transport network can boost Greater KL area
- Will MRT Line 2 go on as planned?
- Ghani did not campaign in Singapore, says republic
- It was Ahmad Zahid’s personal view, says Khairy
- How to choose a home loan
- Instacom wins RM200m job?
- The China dream

